Fossil Consumerism
Energy, Ecology and Everyday Life in the Early Modern Low Countries
Abstract
A groundbreaking perspective on energy history that reveals the early modern home, and not industry, as the first major driver of fossil-fuel adoption. This book explores how the homes of ordinary city dwellers sparked our modern dependence on fossil fuels. Drawing on a rich variety of sources, including probate inventories, household manuals, personal journals, medical treatises and contemporary artwork, it reveals how households in the early modern Low Countries embraced peat and coal to fuel new standards of warmth, light and domesticity. Yet, with these new home comforts came rising indoor pollution, intensified and gendered housework and, ultimately, a quiet shift in humanity’s relationship with nature. Bridging the histories of environments, material culture and consumption, Fossil Consumerism offers a reinterpretation of the historical roots of global warming, finding these not in the industrial mill, but in the intimate, overlooked spaces of the home. This book is essential reading for anyone interested in the everyday origins of the Anthropocene.
Keywords
Fossil energy; Everyday ecologies; Domestic life; Material culture; Consumption; Gendered labour; Anthropocene; Early modern period; Low Countries; History; Anthropocene Studies; Climate and EcologyDOI
10.11116/9789461667236ISBN
9789461667236, 9789461667236, 9789461667236, 9789461667229Publisher
Leuven University PressPublisher website
https://lup.be/Publication date and place
Leuven, 2026Imprint
Leuven University PressClassification
European history: Renaissance
Energy resources
Fossil fuel technologies
Consumerism
History and Archaeology
c 1500 onwards to present day
Social and cultural history
The environment
History
General and world history
Applied ecology


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