To Have and Have Not: Energy in World History

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Rowman & Littlefield, May 15, 2022 - History - 310 pages
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Written by a leading scholar, this essential introduction to the history of energy traces one of humans’ most basic ecological interactions: energy exchange. From fire to agriculture, water wheels to electric dynamos, the rise in intensity led humans to define a new “high energy” existence during the twentieth century. Industrialization and consumption increased the connection between energy and economic and political power, clarifying its importance throughout the world wars and into the Cold War. To Have and Have Not reveals a world in which energy supply now defines global standing, starkly revealing the connection between history and current events that perfectly situates our modern conundrum of a future without fossil fuels. Climate change and the supply of sustainable energy now permeates our modern policy making as we bear witness to the waning years of energy borrowed from the distant past. Brian Black argues that our history of growing energy reliance and past transitions is essential context for understanding our inevitable shift to cleaner energy. Placing this story within the current, rapidly changing historical discourse, this book is timely and persuasive as it lays out our current transition from fossil fuels.

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Contents

Introduction
1
I Energy Exchange in the Biological Old Regime before 1400
9
1 Energy in the Human Past
11
Transitioning by the Numbers Biological Old Regime
38
II Industrialization and the Great Reversal 14001920
41
2 Colonialism Mercantilism and Empire
43
Transitioning by the Numbers Industrialization
72
3 Fossil Fuels and the Transformation of Human Work
75
5 Energy and National Security
139
6 Energy Technology and Empire in the Cold War Era
171
Transitioning by the Numbers HighEnergy Existence
193
7 The Energy Gap Takes Shape
199
IV Integrating Sustainability 20002022
235
Transitioning by the Numbers Considering Sustainable Energy
237
8 Energy Transitions and the Culture of Sustainability
241
Epilogue
273

4 Energizing Everyday Human Life
101
III Energy Broadens the Gap 19002000
137

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About the author (2022)

Brian C. Black is Distinguished Professor of History and Environmental Studies at Penn State Altoona. He is the author of several books, including Crude Reality: Petroleum in World History.

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