Abstract

This article reviews scholarship at the intersection of labor and environmental history in the hope of further bridging the two fields. A taxonomy proposed by J. R. McNeill, which distinguishes among political, material, and cultural environmental history, serves as the organizational framework for the review. After surveying the interaction between labor and environmental history, the author concludes that labor historians have done well to engage with environmental scholarship and may find it rewarding to more directly explore the themes discussed by environmental historians.

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