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    | | |  | A Favored Place : San Juan River Wetlands, Central Veracruz, A.D. 500 to the Present |  | List Price: $35.00 Your Price: $35.00
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| Product Info | Reviews |  | 
 << 1 >>  Rating:
  Summary: A geographer takes new look at 'unfavourable' wetlands.
 Review: 'A Favored Place' is a highly complex analysis of wetland history, tracing  its development through pre-Columbian times to the present.  This is no  easy task.  Siemens' book guides us through detailed archaelogical aspects,  how Spanish conquerors 'read' the land they found themselves  in on the  Mexican Gulf coast, what a nineteenth century German colonist saw, and how  twentieth century planners thought and proposed to do with 'unfavourable'  wetlands. Siemens presents us with a rich and elaborate text, which will be  obliged reading for specialists (especially historians, and geographers),  but also a delight for a more general public interested in the way  perceptions diverge over what is desirable and/or feasible when we come up  against such troublesome concepts as traditional and modern.  Even though  the book abounds in complex technical and methodological questions, amply  backed up by maps, illustrations, photographs, and diagrams, Siemens has an  enviable command of language, thus permitting the lay reader easy and  enjoyable access to the mysteries of what has so often been considered  'unfavourable', but after this re-reading turns out to be 'favourable':  that is, flooded bottom-lands.  At the end of the day, no preconceived view  of the subject escapes Siemens' scalpel.
 
 Rating:
  Summary: A geographer takes new look at 'unfavourable' wetlands.
 Review: 'A Favored Place' is a highly complex analysis of wetland history, tracing its development through pre-Columbian times to the present. This is no easy task. Siemens' book guides us through detailed archaelogical aspects, how Spanish conquerors 'read' the land they found themselves in on the Mexican Gulf coast, what a nineteenth century German colonist saw, and how twentieth century planners thought and proposed to do with 'unfavourable' wetlands. Siemens presents us with a rich and elaborate text, which will be obliged reading for specialists (especially historians, and geographers), but also a delight for a more general public interested in the way perceptions diverge over what is desirable and/or feasible when we come up against such troublesome concepts as traditional and modern. Even though the book abounds in complex technical and methodological questions, amply backed up by maps, illustrations, photographs, and diagrams, Siemens has an enviable command of language, thus permitting the lay reader easy and enjoyable access to the mysteries of what has so often been considered 'unfavourable', but after this re-reading turns out to be 'favourable': that is, flooded bottom-lands. At the end of the day, no preconceived view of the subject escapes Siemens' scalpel.
 
 
 
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