Reimagining a Place for the Wild

UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESSISBN: 9781607816614

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Sale price$76.99
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Edited by Leslie Miller, Louise Excell, Christopher Smart
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:
460 g
Pages:
352

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Description

Leslie Miller directs the Reimagine Western Landscapes Initiative. She was a leading advocate for open space preservation in Park City, Utah and has served on the University of Utah College of Humanities Partnership Board since 2003. She is a writer with feature stories in Park City Magazine, Salt Lake City Weekly, Carmel Magazine, and other publications. Louise Excell is emeritus professor of English and humanities at Dixie State University. She now volunteers for environmental projects and serves on the boards of the Virgin River Land Preservation Association, the Mesa Retreat Center for Writers and Artists, and the Reimagine Western Landscapes Initiative. Christopher Smart has been a Utah journalist since 1983. Formally educated in biology, he has long been interested in the wild and the meaning it holds for culture and people.

"Leslie Miller believes we can use these stories and essays to 'reimagine western landscapes.' And she asks us to do so in ways that 'contribute to the welfare of wild nature in the twenty-first century.' This is a tall order. But the writers in her book map our path. Jeremy Schmidt reminds us that 'Wildness is everywhere. It is part of us... the matrix in which we live.' Erin Halcomb prays, 'For restraint: To stop myself from taking, and doing.' And Harvey Locke sums up our challenge: 'To right the wrongs done to Nature, to native people, and to ourselves in a place that we call home.' So, what are you going to do?" --Stephen Trimble, author of Bargaining for Eden: The Fight for the Last Open Spaces in the West "Reading through this anthology, brought back childhood moments of discovery as well as the answers to questions that have lingered since then. Aside from the personal gift to people like myself with an abiding interest in the wild dwellers that preceded us on this land, Reimagining a Place for the Wild will be an invaluable resource in college courses. Congratulations to the authors for this outstanding anthology." --Florence R. Shepard, author with Susan Marsh of Saving Wyoming's Hoback "Though the collection is unmistakably regional, many of these same concerns are repeated wherever civilization and nature must coexist; this book appeals to a much wider audience than westerners or ecologists only. ... Reimagining a Place for the Wild deserves a place in the canon of American ecological literature alongside the likes of Muir, Leopold, and Carson." --World Literature Today

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