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Stories From the Leopold Shack - Sand County Revisited (Hardcover)
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Stories From the Leopold Shack - Sand County Revisited (Hardcover)
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In 1949, Oxford University Press published ecologist and writer
Aldo Leopold's (1887-1948) classic work, A Sand County Almanac. The
book, which has sold over two million copies worldwide, develops
Leopold's "land ethic," calling for a responsible relationship
between people and the land they inhabit. It remains a touchstone
text for the American conservation movement, and has been little
less than foundational to the fields of environmentalism and
ecology. In this new project, Stories from the Leopold Shack Aldo's
daughter Estella B. Leopold offers a window into the development of
the land-ethic theory as it unfolded in her father's life and
thought. She reveals this organic development through a series of
biographical accounts centered on "the Shack," a small barn on 80
acres in south central Wisconsin purchased by Aldo in 1934 and used
by the family every weekend. Working the land together, the family
built more than a successful farm, habitable family shelter, or
pleasant weekend getaway; they established a new way of living and
relating to the land. This experiment became one of the earliest
efforts in ecological restoration in the United States, and had a
profound impact on Aldo Leopold's later work in forest management
and conservationism. This autobiographical collection begins with
the shack and how it came to be rebuilt, giving readers a glimpse
into the lives of the Leopold children as they grew up in it. It
goes on to describe the family's efforts from 1935 until 1948 to
begin ecological restoration on the property of the old farm, and
concludes with a discussion of more recent and sustained
restoration from 1948 until 2012, including the development of the
Aldo Leopold Foundation and its work. Readers of this collection
will certainly come away with not only a better understanding of
the genesis of Leopold's "land ethic," but also an intimate
portrait of the family that grew within Aldo's hub of restoration
and conservation.
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