One day in April, Jack Davis was in his office at the University of Florida in Gainesville, âreading the riot act to a graduate student about his sloppy writingâ. But his exhortations â the student was âa good student but he just wasnât following instructionâ â were interrupted as Davisâ office and mobile phones began ringing and beeping incessantly.
âWorried that there might be some emergencyâ, he picked up his cell phone and opened a text message from his editor. And that is how he learned that he had won the Pulitzer Prize for History.
âI muttered: âHoly shit!ââ Davis tells Times Higher Education. âThen I fell silent. I was stunned. I had to slide the phone across the desk to show the graduate student because I didnât know how to say it. I think he was pleased because he knew that that was the end of the meeting.â
Davis is a professor of environmental history, a field he defines as being âinterested not simply in human impact on the natural world but also in how nature is a historical agent, how it shapes the course of human historyâ. Accordingly, he and his students âexplore that dialecticâ in classes such as the history of sustainability and the history of water.
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His prizewinning book, °Őłó±đÌęłÒłÜ±ôŽÚ: The Making of an American Sea, published in 2017, takes that approach to the Gulf of Mexicoâs history. Its main narrative begins with the shifting and convulsing of tectonic plates that created the Gulf 150 million years ago, with subsequent chapters structured around different elements of the natural world â fish, birds, water, oil, beaches â that have drawn and enriched the Gulfâs human inhabitants.
The stories of some of those inhabitants are interwoven with this natural history. These include the three generations of the Griffith family who sat on the roof of their Louisiana house as the whole building was swept away by a storm surge during Hurricane Audrey in 1957; the conquistador Juan Ponce de LeĂłn, killed by a native Calusa warriorâs dart laced with poison from the fruit of the manchineel tree, named âmanzanilla de la muerteâ (âlittle apple of deathâ) by the Spanish; and the painter Walter Anderson, who would sail or swim out to an island off the coast of Mississippi to live wild for weeks on end, while sketching birds, being bitten by snakes and, on one occasion, ignoring a coastguard boat that came to rescue him during a hurricane. The beautiful, lyrical descriptions of Andersonâs life on Horn Island are a prime example of how the book achieves an accessible blend of âtraditional historical narrative combined with nature writingâ, as Davis puts it.
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Then there is the destruction wrought by the oil industry. That began on 10 January 1901 at Spindletop, near Beaumont, Texas, when a drilling rig began to shake and a gusher the likes of which had never been seen before spewed forth, âa roaring stream of crude that seemed enraged by the disturbance from its million-year slumberâ, shooting 150 feet into the sky, âbefore doubling into a shower over dancing roughnecksâ. And it culminated in the 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster, when an oil drilling rig off the coast of Louisiana exploded, creating a catastrophic oil spill.
One feature of the Columbia University-administered Pulitzer Prizes â which describe themselves as âthe countryâs most prestigious awardsâŠin journalism, letters, and musicâ â is that no shortlist is published ahead of the results announcement. So while journalists awaited the results âlike the countdown to [a] space shuttle launch or somethingâ, Davis had no idea that his editor had even entered him, never mind that the results were being announced that day.
âPeople ask me: âHow does it feel [to have won]?â And I say: âWell, it feels like somebody elseâs life.â Because I just never imagined my name or something I had written being associated with the Pulitzer.â He adds that the acclaim for it is âabout the sea, and Iâm really happy about thatâ.

Jack Davis of the University of Florida in Gainesville and Pulitzer prizewinner
Davisâ innovative, accessible way of writing about environmentalism has risen to prominence at a time when environmental protections and climate change science are under attack from powerful sections of the USâ right-wing media and political class. And Davis hopes that his book can, in some way, help âstimulate a backlashâ.
He is also pleased to have been able to present a truly three-dimensional perspective on the Gulf region, given history booksâ traditional focus on the north-eastâs role in early US history â partly stemming, he says, from the fact that first European settlement of the Gulf was âby the Spanish, and the Spanish arenât considered real Americansâ.
â[In writing the book] I wanted my readers to know that the Gulf is more than this vacation spot, more than an oil field; that it has this rich and wonderful history thatâs really not been integrated into the larger historical narrative [of the US] by historians,â Davis says.
Writing The Gulf â which also earned Davis the Kirkus Prize for non-fiction and made him a finalist in the National Book Critics Circle non-fiction award â was particularly meaningful to him given that he spent much of his childhood on Floridaâs Gulf coast. During that period, the sea was âa real outletâ for him. âI grew up with two sisters, so I was sometimes on my own,â Davis says. âSometimes we lived in places where I didnât have a lot of kids in the neighbourhood. I had to find ways to keep myself entertained and occupied.â So he âsailed, waterskied, scuba-dived, fished, windsurfedâ on the Gulf. As he puts it in the bookâs acknowledgements, for him âthe docks were [my] sidewalksâŠa little motorboat my bicycle, and a rod and reel my bat and ballâ.
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That background also helps to explain why Davis adopted environmental history as his academic field. âIn Florida, youâre exposed to the natural environment, but youâre also exposed to the destruction of that natural environment. You witness it every day,â he explains. However, he did not start postgraduate study until he was 31. After his undergraduate degree at the University of South Florida, he spent the next decade âtrying to find my way in lifeâ. His first job was as a salesman for a manufacturer. This was âin the 1980s, during the yuppie years, and I thought I wanted to be a yuppieâ. But it was a job he âhated the day I startedâ, and, after turning 30, he vowed to âfind something that gives me fulfilmentâ.
The question was what. âMy childhood was not steeped in intellectual pursuits,â Davis explains. His father was a âsporadically employed salesman-entrepreneur: a failed entrepreneurâ; his mother was a housewife. But his maternal grandfather, who died before Davis was born, had been a history professor, and Davis learned more about him after reading some of his papers. âI found a [role] model, which I did not have among any other family member. That was important inspiration,â he says.
After his PhD, he worked at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, the University of Jordan and Floridaâs Eckerd College. °Őłó±đÌęłÒłÜ±ôŽÚ is the 62-year-oldâs third solo-authored book.
But before that stunning moment in his office in April, Davis would never have been ânaiveâ enough to believe that he could win a Pulitzer. When he was in high school, âI didnât think about being a writer; I thought about skipping school.â He skipped âa lotâ in his senior year and âwent on edifying adventures. I went to museums, I went to natural places. Which ultimately, I think, were probably more important to me than to sit in [class] in my last semester in my senior year being bored out of my mind.â
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The Gulf explains how the region is uniquely exposed to the impact of the fossil fuel industry on climate change and sea levels. The coast is low-lying, without cliffs, and the warm waters fuel hurricanes that, in turn, drive huge storm surges. This endangers an ever-increasing number of people. Floridaâs superb beaches, alongside the advent of air conditioning and mosquito control, drove a post-war property boom that has seen the Sunshine Stateâs population mushroom, making it the USâ third most populous state, after California and fellow Gulf state Texas.

The Florida Keys is illustrative of the extent of coastal development in the stateÂ
But the science of climate change is by no means accepted by everyone. All five of the states that have a Gulf coastline â the other three being Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama â voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election. Trump quickly fulfilled an election pledge to pull the US out of the Paris climate accord, and he has previously described climate change as a Chinese plot to make the US less competitive and as a âmoney-makingâ hoax. Meanwhile, Andrew Wheeler, a former lobbyist for the coal industry, leads the Environmental Protection Agency, having recently succeeded Trumpâs first pick, Scott Pruitt, the scandal-bound climate change sceptic who, in a previous job as Oklahoma attorney general, spent most of his time fighting EPA regulations.
So is it hard for Davis to get his pro-environmentalism message through in such an era?
âIt is and it isnât,â he answers. âBecause there are so many people [who] realise how lame Scott Pruitt is â not to mention the president. So they are eager for people like me to get the word out and to be an advocate for, at the very least a conversation, a serious conversation, on climate change.â Davis has given more than 30 public talks around the US since °Őłó±đÌęłÒłÜ±ôŽÚ was published last year; at the end of them, he says, audience members âcome up to me, and they are so grateful [and say:] âThis is what we need.ââ
Ronald Reaganâs administration âwas a disaster for the environment, tooâ, given the 1980s presidentâs âvery pro-business, anti-environment agendaâ, Davis says. But, during the same era, membership of local and national environmental organisations âexplodedâ. So âin some minor way, perhaps, this book is a vehicle helping to drive the same sort of backlashâ.
Moreover, °Őłó±đÌęłÒłÜ±ôŽÚ âs accessible style â consciously aimed not at academics but at âintellectually curious peopleâ â and its self-presentation as a history, rather than âa book about the Gulf environmentâ, have allowed Davis to preach to âmore than just the choirâ, presenting as its âheroesâ the âactivists and government officialsâ who have battled big industry to clean up the Gulf.
âAnd the Pulitzer obviously helps,â Davis adds.
His bold ambition for his next book is to appeal directly to Americaâs political right, with a pro-conservation message shaped around a natural and cultural history of the bald eagle. âMy strategy with the Gulf book was to present this as an American sea: to reach an American audience, not just a regional audience. With [the bald eagle book] Iâm trying to take things a step further and reach the red, white and blue Americans,â he says.
In writing the book, Davisâ thoughts, therefore, are âconstantlyâ with viewers of Fox News: the ultra-conservative broadcaster famously favoured by Trump, from whom Davis hopes to get an invitation to discuss his new book when it is published. His approach is always to ask himself: âHow do I phrase this in a way that [Fox News viewers] can digest, that they will accept, that wonât be a turn-off for them? I really do believe that we need to have these conversations across these [political] divides.â

US President Donald Trump stands alongside former Environmental Protection Agency administrator Scott Pruitt, who announces the withdrawal of the US from the Paris Climate Accord
His point is that âwhether youâre a tree-hugger or a flag-waver, you appreciate the bald eagleâ. Moreover, the emblematic American bird is also âa great conservation success storyâ. Its âphenomenalâ recovery since the 1990s shows that âyou donât have to change your values, you donât have to alter your standard of living or way of life to live at peace with the natural worldâŠYou go to a place like Alaska â and you donât get any more conservative than Alaska â and they are rabid about protecting the bald eagle up there, because this is a national symbol.â
The overarching message of the book will, accordingly, be that âAmericaâs national identity has this historic and direct connection with its natural heritage. In the early republic, thatâs how America distinguished itself from the European nations. This was one thing that was unique about America â the natural endowmentsâŠAnd lording over all that is the bald eagle, which was selected as the national bird in 1782. So I want to remind Americans of this connection between our national identity and our natural endowments.â
After THE spoke to Davis, The New York Times reported that the Interior Department, in an apparent bid to assist oil and gas drilling, had âproposed the most sweeping set of changes in decades to the Endangered Species Act, the law that brought the bald eagle and the Yellowstone grizzly bear back from the edge of extinction but which Republicans sayâŠrestricts economic developmentâ. Davisâ next book looks highly relevant.
But Davis insists that he is ânot necessarily trying to proselytise peopleâ. His intention is simply to communicate the facts and to invite readers to draw their own conclusions.
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âI just want to get information in front of them, as I do with my students,â he says. â[I want to] let them have that information and then sort things out for themselves. And perhaps theyâll make some adjustments in their thinking.âÂ
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Current thinking
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