At a time when human numbers and technological power pose major
threats to life on this planet, the need to live with restraint and
respect for other life forms and natural ecosystems is increasingly
recognized. This bibliography documents the evolution of wilderness
consciousness in the United States from a period when the
wilderness was simply a resource to be managed and exploited to the
more recent development of an environmental ethic, together with
scientific concerns for the preservation of essential ecosystems
and levels of biodiversity.
The definition of wilderness in the Wilderness Act of 1964 has
been modified in this work to take account of both earlier
attitudes and the scientific developments and philosophical issues
that have surfaced in the past two and a half decades. The
bibliography covers more than 300 contributions to the wilderness
debate, many of which are not treated elsewhere. Lengthy
annotations serve as a review of the literature as a whole and
provide information on writers, content, themes, and important
passages for each entry. The compiler has included such diverse
literary materials as poetry, fiction, and nature writing as well
as history and philosophy, scientific research, and works
advocating particular wilderness uses and policies. Offering easy
access to a rich and varied literature, this bibliography will be
an important reference for activists, educators, researchers, and
policymakers.
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