Nature, Technology and Society: The Cultural Roots of the Current Environmental Crisis

Author:   Victor Ferkiss ,  Barbara Bergman ,  Bina Agarwal ,  Maria Floro
Publisher:   New York University Press
Edition:   New edition
ISBN:  

9780814726174


Pages:   341
Publication Date:   01 November 1994
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Nature, Technology and Society: The Cultural Roots of the Current Environmental Crisis


Overview

A valuable and documented source. --Choice Ferkiss has navigated an exceedingly complex course through our philosophical history, tracing the lineage of ideas about nature and technology as they evolved from ancient times through Taoism, industrialism, Marxism, and several other 'isms.'

Full Product Details

Author:   Victor Ferkiss ,  Barbara Bergman ,  Bina Agarwal ,  Maria Floro
Publisher:   New York University Press
Imprint:   New York University Press
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.454kg
ISBN:  

9780814726174


ISBN 10:   0814726178
Pages:   341
Publication Date:   01 November 1994
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Donna Haverty-Stackes America's Forgotten Holiday offers a welcome reminder that not many generations ago, May Day brought more outbursts of idealism than new home construction, more social solidarity than consumerism, and the hopes for a democratic future that we need ever more urgently in the torrents of imperial wars today. -Paul Buhle, Brown University


Haverty-Stacke marches through the post-Haymarket U. S. history of May Day with a determined step. In the long march across a century and more, she doesn't allow her interpretive feet stray too far from her designated path... Like Marx's burrowing 'old mole', May day certainly digs its way into apparent oblivion in specific periods when the tide of history seems to turn against those who speak boldly against oppression. It has been buried in the past, as Haverty-Stacke shows, but it is unlikely to remain permanently underground. -Labour History Review, Haverty-Stacke offers a significantly more nuanced, complicated, and messier take on this trajectory, showing that radicalism has been an ongoing, endogenous part of American political culture and a vital component of twentieth-century politics and expressions of nationalism. She can make this argument so persuasively because of her focus on broad, vernacular politics, created as much in the street as in formal political processes... Forgetting the history of May Day is not just about forgetting earlier alternatives to the present day, but also about forgetting that radicalisms- of nearly every variety- are as American as apple pie. -American Historical Review, Donna Haverty-Stackes America's Forgotten Holiday offers a welcome reminder that not many generations ago, May Day brought more outbursts of idealism than new home construction, more social solidarity than consumerism, and the hopes for a democratic future that we need ever more urgently in the torrents of imperial wars today. -Paul Buhle, Brown University America's Forgotten Holiday details the long and proud history of May Day and compels us to recall both its contested meanings and wonder at the forces and motives of those who have obliterated our memory of it. Haverty-Stacke ties together the study of memory with that of public space while nimbly navigating the troubled, sectarian waters of communist and anti-communist history. -Daniel J. Walkowitz, New York University Haverty-Stacke recounts how after WW II, American labor avoided contact with the communists and May Day celebrations. Instead, more workers and their unions became active in the new Labor Day holiday. This readable book, which blends US labor, political, and cultural history, can be used as a companion to any US history or labor history text. - Choice ,


<p> Donna Haverty-Stackes America's Forgotten Holiday offers a welcome reminder that not many generations ago, May Day brought more outbursts of idealism than new home construction, more social solidarity than consumerism, and the hopes for a democratic future that we need ever more urgently in the torrents of imperial wars today. <br>-Paul Buhle, Brown University


""A fine book...it reaches broadly and deeply into our cultural roots, bringing religion, theology, popular culture, science, folklore, natural history and much else into the discussion...an excellent source book [and] a valuable reference work, one of those books that belong on the shelf, near at hand, in the collection of any serious student of environmentalism and the history of technology. It will be consulted often.""--Walter Rosenbaum, University of Florida, author of Environmental Politics and Policy ""A valuable and documented source.""--Choice ""A valuable overview of conceptions of nature, science, and technology since ancient times. Anyone concerned with global environmental issues will benefit from its temperate, even- handed treatment of the hundreds of thinkers who have participated in great age-old debate over the human conquest of the earth and its resources.""--W. Warren Wagar, Distinguished Teaching Professor, SUNY, Binghamton ""An extraordinary achievement--a dazzling scholarly tour de force that is so clearly and elegantly written that readers are gripped by the superb story [Ferkiss] tells. It is the story of what may be the central issue of our time--humanity's relationship with nature. . . . Perhaps no scholar on earth is better equipped to tell this story. . . . [Ferkiss] exhibits an extraordinary command of the subject as he takes readers on a fascinating guided tour through Western and Eastern culture, beautifully summarizing and judiciously commenting on the changing attitudes shown by people ranging from Buddhists to Nazis, from the ancient Greeks to today's Earth Firsters and ecotopians .... A genuine treat.""--Edward Cornish, President, World Future Society ""Ferkiss has navigated an exceedingly complex course through our philosophical history, tracing the lineage of ideas about nature and technology as they evolved from ancient times through Taoism, industrialism, Marxism, and several other 'isms.'""--Sierra Magazine ""Offers a colorful, concise, and well-written survey of formal thought on the role of science and technology.""--Policy Currents ""Worldwide in its scope and reach, Ferkiss's book encompasses ethics and technology, society, and international relations--a true renaissance perspective. It is written clearly and without trepidations.""--Amitai Etzioni, author of The Moral Dimension


Author Information

VICTOR FERKISS is Professor Emeritus of Government, Georgetown University and the author of Technological Man and The Future of Technological Civilization.

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