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After Preservation: Saving American Nature in the Age of Humans [Mīkstie vāki]

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Looks at environmentalism in America and the effects climate change, rapid urbanization, agriculture, and industrial intensification have had on the preservation and protection of nature.

From John Muir to David Brower, from the creation of Yellowstone National Park to the Endangered Species Act, environmentalism in America has always had close to its core a preservationist ideal. Generations have been inspired by its ethos—to encircle nature with our protection, to keep it apart, pristine, walled against the march of human development. But we have to face the facts. Accelerating climate change, rapid urbanization, agricultural and industrial devastation, metastasizing fire regimes, and other quickening anthropogenic forces all attest to the same truth: the earth is now spinning through the age of humans.After Preservation takes stock of the ways we have tried to both preserve and exploit nature to ask a direct but profound question: what is the role of preservationism in an era of seemingly unstoppable human development, in what some have called the Anthropocene?

Ben A. Minteer and Stephen J. Pyne bring together a stunning consortium of voices comprised of renowned scientists, historians, philosophers, environmental writers, activists, policy makers, and land managers to negotiate the incredible challenges that environmentalism faces. Some call for a new, post-preservationist model, one that is far more pragmatic, interventionist, and human-centered. Others push forcefully back, arguing for a more chastened and restrained vision of human action on the earth. Some try to establish a middle ground, while others ruminate more deeply on the meaning and value of wilderness. Some write on species lost, others on species saved, and yet others discuss the enduring practical challenges of managing our land, water, and air.

From spirited optimism to careful prudence to critical skepticism, the resulting range of approaches offers an inspiring contribution to the landscape of modern environmentalism, one driven by serious, sustained engagements with the critical problems we must solve if we—and the wild garden we may now keep—are going to survive the era we have ushered in.

Contributors include: Chelsea K. Batavia, F. Stuart (Terry) Chapin III, Norman L. Christensen, Jamie Rappaport Clark, William Wallace Covington, Erle C. Ellis, Mark Fiege, Dave Foreman, Harry W. Greene, Emma Marris, Michelle Marvier, Bill McKibben, J. R. McNeill, Curt Meine, Ben A. Minteer, Michael Paul Nelson, Bryan Norton, Stephen J. Pyne, Andrew C. Revkin, Holmes Rolston III, Amy Seidl, Jack Ward Thomas, Diane J. Vosick, John A. Vucetich, Hazel Wong, and Donald Worster.

Recenzijas

"After Preservation asks one of the big, hairy, audacious questions of the early twenty-first century: How should humans relate to nature in the Anthropocene? Minteer and Pyne have assembled an impressive assortment of contributors to offer a wide-ranging set of answers in concise, poignant, and powerful essays. This is an important and timely contribution that should be read by people working to construct a thriving and sustainable future." (R. Bruce Hull, author of Infinite Nature)

Writing on Stone, Writing in the Wind
1(8)
Ben A. Minteer
Stephen J. Pyne
Restoring the Nature of America
9(8)
Andrew C. Revkin
Nature Preservation and Political Power in the Anthropocene
17(7)
J. R. McNeill
Too Big for Nature
24(8)
Erle C. Ellis
After Preservation? Dynamic Nature in the Anthropocene
32(9)
Holmes Rolston III
Humility in the Anthropocene
41(9)
Emma Marris
The Anthropocene and Ozymandias
50(9)
Dave Foreman
The Higher Altruism
59(7)
Donald Worster
The Anthropocene: Disturbing Name, Limited Insight
66(8)
John A. Vucetich
Michael Paul Nelson
Chelsea K. Batavia
Ecology and the Human Future
74(10)
Bryan Norton
A Letter to the Editors: In Defense of the Relative Wild
84(12)
Curt Meine
When Extinction Is a Virtue
96(9)
Ben A. Minteer
Pleistocene Rewilding and the Future of Biodiversity
105(9)
Harry W. Greene
The Democratic Promise of Nature Preservation
114(9)
Mark Fiege
Green Fire Meets Red Fire
123(10)
Stephen J. Pyne
Restoration, Preservation, and Conservation: An Example for Dry Forests of the West
133(13)
William Wallace Covington
Diane J. Vosick
Preserving Nature on US Federal Lands: Managing Change in the Context of Change
146(8)
Norman L. Christensen
After Preservation---the Case of the Northern Spotted Owl
154(9)
Jack Ward Thomas
Celebrating and Shaping Nature: Conservation in a Rapidly Changing World
163(7)
F. Stuart Chapin III
Move Over Grizzly Adams---Conservation for the Rest of Us
170(8)
Michelle Marvier
Hazel Wong
Endangered Species Conservation: Then and Now
178(8)
Jamie Rappaport Clark
Resembling the Cosmic Rhythms: The Evolution of Nature and Stewardship in the Age of Humans
186(8)
Amy Seidl
Coda
194(5)
Bill McKibben
Notes 199(16)
Contributors 215(4)
Index 219
Ben A. Minteer holds the Arizona Zoological Society Chair in the School of Life Sciences at Arizona State University. He has published a number of books, including Refounding Environmental Ethics and The Landscape of Reform. Stephen J. Pyne is a Regents' Professor in the School of Life Sciences at Arizona State University. He is the author, editor, or coeditor of many books, including, most recently, The Last Lost World and Fire: Nature and Culture.