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Environmental Stewardship: Images from Popular Culture

Autor Dorothy J. Howell
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 iul 1997 – vârsta până la 17 ani
This work addresses the cultural background of stewardship as a progression from individual personal aesthetics to a deeply informed environmental ethic that could become a national environmental policy. Howell begins by assessing our personal cultural background and our philosophical notions of our role in the natural world. She looks at the evolution of Western civilization and changing worldviews in relation to nature, examining especially early conceptions of a more appealing, simpler life closer to nature in contrast to the perceived civilized world that is portrayed as decadent. Howell examines archetypes from literature and the popular arts, finding examples in Jungian psychology and in contemporary film and television that support the Wild Man image and promote the Simple Life yearning. She then looks at the early 20th-century conservation and preservation writers as the most direct ancestors of today's environmental movement and an immediate source of inspiration.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780897893916
ISBN-10: 0897893913
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Notă biografică

Dorothy J. Howell, formerly an applied microbial ecologist, environmental counsel and educator, is a candidate for the PhD in environmental studies at Antioch New England Graduate School. She is the author of Ecology for Environmental Professionals (Quorum, 1994), Scientific Literacy and Environmental Policy (Quorum, 1992), and Intellectual Properties and the Legal Protection of Fictional Characters (Quorum, 1990).

Cuprins

PrefaceIntroductionOrigins: Whence We ComeOrigins of the Western TraditionEurope in the Continuum of the Western TraditionTradition and the Founding of a NationRepercussions: Expressions and Implications of AlienationImagination and the Arts: Where We Saw OurselvesEmergence of the Simple LifeSciences, Art, and LiteratureHeroes, Wild Men, and the Noble SavageReflections of the Natural World: What We Left BehindLessons from beyond America's Western TraditionImages from Our First NationsContemporary Amerindian PerspectivesA Sense of PlacePopular Culture: Outlets and SurrogatesPlace and Ambivalence in the Popular ArtsEdgar Rice Burroughs's Tarzan of the Apes: Timeless SurrogateRelated Contemporaries and Descendants of TarzanThe Ape-Man's Modern Descendants and Remote RelativesStewardship: Reconnection with the Natural WorldThe Human Niche and Defining a Personal Environmental EthicCultural Sources for a Restored RelationshipToward a National Environmental EthicBibliographyIndex

Recenzii

Howell begins this fascinating book with a discussion of two films, Local Hero and On Deadly Ground, showing how in various manifestations of popular culture, 'each of us is either endowed with or searching for an environmental aesthetic. Howell argeus that people search for an expression of connection with nature in the popular media, and that this 'sacred journey' leads to better environmental policy. . . . [T]his ambitious and engrossing book presents a new understabding of its topic and is well worth reading. All general and academic collections.
[H]arden's offering has the strength of providing a highly readable overview of Columbia River history colored by portrayals of actual participants in an important sector of the region's history. Because of this accessibility, the work will serve students of environmental history and those of regional and United States history generally well.
[T]he author offers a number of insightful concepts and arguments. . . . Many of Howell's points are extremely thought-provoking.