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Loving God's Wildness - The Christian Roots of Ecological Ethics in American Literature (Hardcover, 2)
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Loving God's Wildness - The Christian Roots of Ecological Ethics in American Literature (Hardcover, 2)
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Analysing writings ranging from the Puritans to the present day,
Loving God's Wildness traces the effects of Christian theology on
America's ecological imagination, revealing the often conflicted
ways in which Americans relate to and perceive the natural world.
When the Puritans arrived in the New World to carry out the coloni
zation they saw as divinely mandated, they were confronted by the
American wilderness. Part of their theology led them to view the
natu ral environment as "a temple of God" in which they should
glorify and serve its creator. The larger prevailing theological
view, however, saw this vast continent as "the Devil's Territories"
needing to be conquered and cultivated for God's Kingdom. These
contradictory designations gave rise to an ambivalence regarding
the character of this land and humanity's proper relation to it.
Loving God's Wildness rediscovers the environmental roots of
America's Puritan heritage. In tracing this history, Jeffrey Bilbro
demonstrates how the dualistic Christianity that the Puritans
brought to America led them to see the land as an empty wilderness
that God would turn into a productive source of marketable
commodities. Bilbro carefully explores the effect of this dichotomy
in the nature writings of Henry David Thoreau, John Muir, Willa
Cather, and Wendell Berry. Thoreau, Muir, Cather, and Berry
imaginatively developed the Puritan theological tradition to
propose practical, physical means by which humans should live and
worship within the natural temple of God's creation. They reshaped
Puritan dualism, each according to the par ticular needs of his or
her own ecological and cultural contexts, into a theology that
demands care for the entire created community. While differing in
their approaches and respective ecological ethics, the four authors
Bilbro examines all share the conviction that God remains ac tive
in creation and that humans ought to relinquish their selfish ends
to participate in his wild ecology. Loving God's Wildness fills a
critical gap in literary criticism and environ mental studies by
offering a sustained, detailed argument regarding how Christian
theology has had a profound and enduring legacy in shaping the
contours of the American ecological imagination. Literary critics,
scholars of religion and environmental studies, and thoughtful
Christians who are concerned about environmental issues will profit
from this engaging new book.
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