[This summer, my older son is extending his prior efforts to help combat climate change by interning with the amazing Climate Just Cities project. That project is part of the long legacy of American environmental activism, so this week I’ll highlight a handful of such activisms. Leading up to a special weekend post on Climate Just Cities!]
On three
recent books that carry the legacy of environmental writing into the 21st
century.
1)
Coming of Age at the End of Nature: A
Generation Faces Living on a Changed Planet (2016): Edited
by Julie
Dunlap and Susan A. Cohen, this wonderful
collection gathers together a wide variety of writers (twenty-two in total,
as well as an introduction by the great Bill McKibben) and
genres to consider what environmental writing and activism are and can be in
this bleak historical moment. I excerpted a few pieces from it for my Spring
2017 adult learning class on contemporary issues and they were very
well-received, but I would really argue that the book works best when read as a
whole, putting these individual voices in conversation and community to
exemplify the subtitle’s generational cohort as fully as possible.
2)
Breaking into the Backcountry (2010): I’ve highlighted my FSU
colleague Steve Edwards in a number of posts over the years, and in
terms of his evolving writing career have been particularly inspired by pieces
on both parenting and reading. But
Steve’s first book, the magisterial Breaking
into the Backcountry, is likewise great and indeed represents a worthy heir
to works like Desert
Solitaire by Edward Abbey. As I
said about Abbey’s 1968 book in that hyperlinked post, a 2010 project on the
importance and inspiration of spending nearly a year in solitude in nature
might seem a bit too divorced from the social and communal issues facing us
collectively these days. But like Desert
Solitaire and Walden and so many
other great works, Steve’s thoughtful and moving book proves that the opposite
is true: that we need such books and writing now more than ever.
3)
Trace:
Memory, History, Race, and the American Landscape (2016): We
also need books that can bridge those only superficial gaps between (for
example) nature and society, individual experience and collective history, and
I know of few works (recent or otherwise) that do so more potently than Lauret Savoy’s Trace. Savoy, a geologist and Professor
of Environmental Studies at Mount Holyoke College, links those scientific and
scholarly pursuits to both her own and America’s multi-racial heritage and
identity, and the result is a book that truly exemplifies interdisciplinary
engagements with some of our most complex and shared collective spaces and
themes. Trace seems to me to be a key
reflection of the future of environmental writing (and a key part of the future
of American Studies to boot), and an illustration, like all three of these
books, that that future is in very good hands.
Last environmental
activism tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? American environmental voices or efforts you’d highlight?
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