• "E40 Degrees is an invaluable book for those who wish to learn the art of reading the landscape as a layered palimpsest of geophysical circumstances and human intentions. Taking a chain of small towns scattered along the eastward-angling axis of the Appalachian cordillera as his area of study, Professor Williams deciphers their structure both on the ground as palpable places and, more abstractly, through informative contemporary mapping technologies. Analyzing archival maps, interpreting period photographs, noting the effects of shifts in types of trade and means of transportation, observing with a sympathetic eye the people, both dead and living, who inscribe a particular locale with the events of their lives and their notions of place-in all these ways the author models a valuable composite approach for the cultural geographer. Devoid of tendentiousness, E40 Degrees also makes a compelling case for uniting past and present in the preservation of the vanishing beauty of small town America."
—Betsy Barlow Rogers, President, Foundation for Landscape Studies
 

East 40 Degrees:
An Interpretive Atlas

Jack Williams
320 pages, 9 x 10 1/2
129 color and 54 b&w illustrations
Cloth 978-0-8139-2524-0 • $50.00
Paper 978-0-8139-2585-1 • $30.00


Visit the author web site.

The Appalachian mountain chain once contained the highest and most dramatic mountains on earth. Worn down over time, these mountains still hold some of the most diverse climactic zones and singular geological formations in existence. In East 40 Degrees: An Interpretive Atlas, Jack Williams examines a succession of beautiful but little-known towns along this cordillera (a term descended from the Latin chorda, meaning "braided rope"), revealing in their layers of history and geography how both their diverse cultural and social circumstances and their geological history were instrumental in forming each town's distinctive character.

Referring to the spatial orientation of the Appalachian mountain chain, the "east 40 degrees" of the title runs from Alabama through fifteen states to the coast of Maine. Each town Williams examines sits within the folds of these mountains or beside a river nourished in their moist uplands. Beginning his record with the continental collisions that shaped each town's history more than 300 million years ago, Williams allows us to "see the tenuous web of connections between ourselves and the natural processes that shape this earth." Featuring a wealth of beautiful and significant illustrations and maps, this unique work brings into focus the critical issues of environmental and cultural sustainability confronting us today. Elegant, poetic, and erudite, East 40 Degrees will appeal to architects and landscape architects, planners, environmental historians, ecologists, geographers, and anyone interested in the history and origins of our modern landscapes and towns.

Publication of this volume was assisted by a grant from Furthermore: a program of the J. M. Kaplan Fund.



Jack Williams is Professor and Chair of Landscape Architecture at Auburn University.


The University of
Virginia Press

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