Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2016
Librería: Steven Wolfe Books, Newton Centre, MA, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
EUR 27,01
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritohardcover. Condición: Fine. Estado de la sobrecubierta: includes dust-jacket. DETAILS: near fine dust-jacket, fresh attractive copy, fine condition dark gray cloth, essentially like a new book, glued binding. POWELL, MILES A. Vanishing America: species extinction, racial peril, and the origins of conservation. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2016, stated First Printing, 251pp., . Vanishing America examines discourses of extinction - of species and of peoples - to identify key transitions in American environmental and racial thought between the mid nineteenth and mid twentieth centuries. By 1900 many whites had begun to see themselves as an imperiled race and increasingly identified with the nation's dwindling wildlife. Fearing they would share Indians' anticipated extinction, elite environmental pundits developed racially-charged preservationist arguments that influenced the development of scientific racism, eugenics, immigration restriction, and population control, and which still inform the modern environmental movement. Vanishing America suggests that a long history of drawing connections between environmental health and the mental and physical wellbeing of white Americans has helped create an enduring divide between the nation's environmental movement, on the one hand, and the nation's poor people and nonwhite races on the other. - CONTENTS: Introduction: A nation's park, containing man and beast -- Surviving progress -- Preserving the frontier -- A line of unbroken descent -- The last of her tribe -- Dead of its own too-much -- Epilogue: De-extinction. ISBN 9780674971561.