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Richard
C. Hoffmann
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| Degrees:
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Ph.D., 1970, Yale
University
B.A., 1965, University of Wisconsin-Madison
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| Current
Position: |
Professor (History)
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| Recent
Publications: |
"Economic
Development and Aquatic Ecosystems in Medieval Europe," American
Historical Review , 101 (1996), 631-669.
Fishers' Craft and Lettered Art: Tracts on Fishing from the End
of the Middle Ages. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1997
“Medieval Fishing” in Paolo Squatriti, ed., Working
with Water in Medieval Europe: Technology and Resource Use, pp.
331-393. Leiden: Brill, 2000.
“Frontier Foods for Late Medieval Consumers: Culture, Economy,
Ecology,” Environment and History, 7 (2001), 131-167.
“A Longer View: Is Industrial Metabolism Really the Problem?”
in M. Fischer-Kowalski, E. Rosa, R.P. Sieferle, and B. Smetschka,
eds., Nature, Society and History: Long Term Dynamics of Social
Metabolism, eds., a special issue of Innovation: The European
Journal of Social Sciences, 14:2 (2001), 143-155.
“Carp, Cods, Connections: New Fisheries in the Medieval
European Economy and Environment” in Mary J. Henninger-Voss,
ed., Animals in Human Histories: The Mirror of Nature and Culture,
3-55. Rochester, N.Y.: University of Rochester Press, 2002.
"Ecology" in William C. Jordan, ed., Dictionary of the
Middle Ages, Supplement 1, 169-174 New York: American Council
of Learned Societies / Scribners, 2004.
"Chapter 3: Medieval Christendom in God’s Creation:
Environmental Continuities, Coevolutions, and Changes,”
in Tamara Whited et al., Northern Europe: An Environmental History,
45-72. Santa Barbara - Denver - Oxford: ABC-Clio, 2005.
"Footprint Metaphor and Metabolic Realities: Environmental
Impacts of Medieval European Cities," in Paolo Squatriti,
ed., Natures Past: The Environment and Human History, 288-325.
The Comparative Studies in Society and History book series. Ann
Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2007.
"Homo et Natura, Homo in
Natura: Ecological Perspectives on the European Middle Ages,"
in Barbara A. Hanawalt and Lisa J. Kiser, eds., Engaging with
Nature. Essays on the Natural World in Medieval and Early Modern
Europe, 11-38. Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame
Press, 2008.
"Medieval Europeans and their
Aquatic Ecosystems" in Bernd Herrmann, ed. Beiträge
zum Göttinger Umwelthistorischen Kolloquium 2007-2008,
45-64. Graduiertenkolleg Interdisziplinäre Umweltgeschichte.
Göttingen: Universitätsverlag, 2008 [free access online
through http://univerlag.uni-goettingen.de]
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| Papers
/ Lectures: |
2001
“Aquaculture and the Engineering of Landscapes in Medieval
Europe” in a session on “Long Term Landscape History
in Europe” at the annual meeting of the American Society
for Environmental History, Durham, N.C., March-April 2001
“Deep History in Some Marine
Coastal Environments”, an invited paper in a special session
on “Marine Environmental History: Shifting Baselines and
Conservation Targets” at the Second Symposium on Marine
Conservation Biology sponsored by the Marine Conservation Biology
Institute, San Francisco State University, June 2001.
2002 “Medieval
Europeans and their Aquatic Ecosystems,” an invited contribution
to a symposium “Historical Perspectives on Natural History
and Ecology” at the 83d Annual Meeting of the Western Society
of Naturalists, Monterey, California, 2002 November 8-11.
2003 "The 'Ecological
Footprint' of Medieval European Cities", an invited contribution
to an international conference on 'Natures Past: Comparative Perspectives
on Environmental Change" sponsored by Comparative Studies
in Society and History at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor,
2003 October 3-4.
2004 "Aquatic
Resource Use in Medieval Europe", an invited contribution
to an international workshop "Ecological History of the Wadden
Sea: 2000 years of human-induced change in a unique coastal ecosystem"
at the Wadden Sea Field Research Station, List, Sylt, of the Alfred-Wegener-Institute
of Polar and Marine Research, Universität Kiel, 2004 January
22-25.
"Homo et Natura, Homo in Natura:
Ecological Perspectives on the European Middle Ages," an
invited lecture to open a public series on "Nature in the
Middle Ages and the Renaissance" at the Center for Medieval
and Renaissance Studies, Ohio State University, 2004 October 15.
2005 "Teaching
preindustrial environmental history", panelist in Round Table
"Teaching Environmental History" at the annual meeting
of the Canadian Historical Association, University of Western
Ontario, 2005 May 31.
"Strekfusz: a competitor to
imported stockfish in late medieval eastern Europe", a paper
for the 13th Fish Remains Working Group Meeting, International
Council for Archaeozoology, Basel, Switzerland, 2005 October 5-9.
"Aquatic Commons in worlds of
change: Medieval European experiences and present-day management
issues" an invited lecture at the Zentrum für Umweltgeschichte
of the Fakultät für Interdisziplinäre Forschung
und Fortbildung, Universität Klagenfurt in Wien, Vienna,
2005 October 17.
2007 "Medieval European Fisheries: Archaeological
and historical evidence for some indicator species," an invited
lecture at Institut Maurice-Lamontagne / Maurice Lamontagne Institute,
Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Mont Joli, Quebec, March 30.
2008 "Puzzling
out medieval herring from a European perspective", a paper
for the 37th Annual University of British Columbia Medieval Workshop,
Vancouver, 2008 April 2-3.
"Nature and Culture, Culture and Nature,
in the Middle Ages and in Medieval Studies" an invited keynote
lecture at the International Medieval Congress 2008 at the University
of Leeds, 2008 July 7-10.
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| Courses
taught recently: |
History
2220 “Medieval and Early Modern Europe”
History 3212 "Society in Preindustrial Europe"
History 3225 “At the Fringes of the Medieval West”
History 3280 "Europeans and the Natural World to 1800"
History 4224 “Human Economy and Natural Environment in Preindustrial
Europe”
History 5350 “Environmental History of Medieval and Early
Modern Europe”
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| Research
Interests: |
Environmental, economic, and social
history of medieval and early modern Europe, notably involving
natural resource use (fisheries), human ecology, peasants, frontiers,
and intercultural relations.
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| Awards/Grants:
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Recipient of 1997
Alice Hamilton Prize awarded by the American Society for Environmental
History for the best article in the field of environmental history
published during 1995 or 1996 (“Economic Development and
Aquatic Ecosystems in Medieval Europe”)
2005 sabbatical leave fellowship from York University for “Fisheries
in Medieval European Environmental History”
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