“…The emphasis on people, culture, and policy is, according to Evenden and Wynn, entirely appropriate: For all that environmental historians seek to insert nature into their accounts of the past, as historians they must surely remain mindful of Marc Bloch's assertion, that 'it is man that history seeks to grasp.' 30 That said, nature has yet to be normalized as a historical actor and non-environmental historians continue to write histories with the environment painted onto the background. Thus, environmental historians still have work to do in ensuring that nature is taken into account in interpreting Canada's past, and in being attentive to those instances where our relations with nature, our own natures, and non-human nature have played particularly significant roles in shaping a common history.…”