Fischer‐Kowalski, M. (1998). Society's metabolism: the intellectual history of materials flow analysis, Part I, 1860–1970. Journal of industrial ecology, 2(1), 61-78.
In this article, we inquire into the intellectual history of the application of the biological concept of metabolism to social systems not as a metaphor, but as a material and energetic process within the economy and society, vis-ávis varius natural systems. The paper reviews several scientific traditions that may contribute to such a view, including biology and ecology, social theory, cultural anthropology, and social geography. It assembles widely and shows how they prepare the ground for the pioneers of "industrial metabolism" in the late 1960s. In connection to varying political perspectives, metabolism gradually takes shape as a powerful interdisciplinary concept. It will take another 25 years before this approach becomes one of the most important paradigms for the empirical analysis of the society-nature-interaction across various disciplines. This later period will be the subject of part II of this literature review.