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Key Information
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| Authors: |
Robert L. Dorman |
| Nonfiction Category: |
Biography & Autobiography · Nature |
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Book Editions
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Format: Paperback, 256 Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Pr (April 01, 1998) Measurements: 9.5"(h) x 5.5"(w) x 0.75"(d), 0.9 lbs. ISBN: 9780807846995 |
| More Information |
| Details: |
In A Word for Nature, Robert Dorman explores the careers and ideas of four figures of monumental importance in the history of American conservation - George Perkins Marsh, Henry David Thoreau, John Muir, and John Wesley Powell. He offers lively portraits of each of these early environmental advocates, who witnessed firsthand the impact of economic expansion and industrial revolution on fragile landscapes from the forests of New England to the mountains of the West. By examining the nineteenth-century world in which the four men lived - its society, economy, politics, and culture - Dorman sheds light on the roots of American environmentalism. He provides an overview of the early decades of both resource conservation and wilderness preservation, discussing how Marsh, Thoreau, Muir, and Powell helped define the issues that began changing the nation's attitudes toward its environment by the early twentieth century. Dorman's readings of works including Marsh's Man and Nature, Thoreau's The Maine Woods, Muir's Th |
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