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Articles by Judee Burr

Judee Burr is a senior studying earth systems and philosophy at Stanford University, and is an intern at the Bill Lane Center for the American West, where she researches the relationship between fire, land management, and Indigenous communities.

Featured Article

Richard White. (Photo by Jesse White.)

You know the feeling: the intoxicatingly fresh air, the crunch of leaves under your hiking boots, and only the chirps, gurgles, and caws of the forest to keep you company as you wander down the trail. Ah, to be free of people and surrounded by untouched nature …

Environmental historian Richard White will stop you right there. This contrast between a hike in the woods and a walk down the city streets, between Yosemite and your office cubicle, is not one of nature versus non-nature. People have lived in, worked in, and even burned these landscapes throughout history, White says, and the idea of pristine wilderness that is “untrammeled by man” — or so goes the Wilderness Act — is a myth. “Particularly with climate change,” he says, “we have now touched everything except maybe some of the deepest parts of the ocean.”

A 2012 Pulitzer finalist for his book Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America, a recipient of a 1995 MacArthur “Genius” award, and presently the Margaret Byron Professor of History at Stanford University, White makes a ... Read more