Conserving Words

Conserving Words How American Nature Writers Shaped the Environmental Movement

Paperback (30 Sep 2005)

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Publisher's Synopsis

The first study to link America's nature writing tradition to the development of its environmental organizations. ""Conserving Words"" looks at five authors of seminal works of nature writing who also founded or revitalized important environmental organizations: Theodore Roosevelt and the Boone and Crockett Club, Mabel Osgood Wright and the National Audubon Society, John Muir and the Sierra Club, Aldo Leopold and the Wilderness Society, and Edward Abbey and Earth First! These writers used powerfully evocative and galvanizing metaphors for nature, metaphors that Daniel J. Philippon calls ""conserving"" words: frontier (Roosevelt), garden (Wright), park (Muir), wilderness (Leopold), and utopia (Abbey). Integrating literature, history, biography, and philosophy, this ambitious study explores how ""conserving"" words enabled narratives to convey environmental values as they explained how human beings should interact with the nonhuman world.

Book information

ISBN: 9780820327594
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Imprint: University of Georgia Press
Pub date:
Language: English
Number of pages: 392
Weight: 564g
Height: 152mm
Width: 237mm
Spine width: 26mm