This work addresses the cultural background of stewardship as a
progression from individual personal aesthetics to a deeply
informed environmental ethic that could become a national
environmental policy. Howell begins by assessing our personal
cultural background and our philosophical notions of our role in
the natural world. She looks at the evolution of Western
civilization and changing worldviews in relation to nature,
examining especially early conceptions of a more appealing, simpler
life closer to nature in contrast to the perceived civilized world
that is portrayed as decadent. Howell examines archetypes from
literature and the popular arts, finding examples in Jungian
psychology and in contemporary film and television that support the
Wild Man image and promote the Simple Life yearning. She then looks
at the early 20th-century conservation and preservation writers as
the most direct ancestors of today's environmental movement and an
immediate source of inspiration.
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