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Wilderness Forever - Howard Zahniser and the Path to the Wilderness Act (Paperback)
Loot Price: R923
Discovery Miles 9 230
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Wilderness Forever - Howard Zahniser and the Path to the Wilderness Act (Paperback)
Series: Weyerhaeuser Environmental Books
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Winner of the Forest History Society's 2006 Charles A. Weyerhaeuser
Book Award As a central figure in the American wilderness
preservation movement in the mid-twentieth century, Howard Zahniser
(1906-1964) was the person most responsible for the landmark
Wilderness Act of 1964. While the rugged outdoorsmen of the
earlyenvironmental movement, such as John Muir and Bob Marshall,
gave the cause a charismatic face, Zahniser strove to bring
conservation's concerns into the public eye and the
preservationists' plans to fruition. In many fights to save
besieged wild lands, he pulled together fractious coalitions, built
grassroots support networks, wooed skittish and truculent
politicians, and generated streams of eloquent prose celebrating
wilderness. Zahniser worked for the Bureau of Biological Survey (a
precursor to the Fish and Wildlife Service) and the Department of
the Interior, wrote for Nature magazine, and eventually managed the
Wilderness Society and edited its magazine, Living Wilderness. The
culmination of his wilderness writing and political lobbying was
the Wilderness Act of 1964. All of its drafts included his eloquent
definition of wilderness, which still serves as a central tenet for
the Wilderness Society: "an area where the earth and its community
of life are untrammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor who
does not remain." The bill was finally signed into law shortly
after his death. Pervading his tireless work was a deeply held
belief in the healing powers of nature for a humanity ground down
by the mechanized hustle-bustle of modern, urban life. Zahniser
grew up in a family of Methodist ministers, and although he moved
away from any specific denomination, a spiritual outlook informed
his thinking about wilderness. His love of nature was not so much a
result of scientific curiosity as a sense of wonder at its beauty
and majesty, and a wish to exist in harmony with all other living
things. In this deeply researched and affectionate portrait, Mark
Harvey brings to life this great leader of environmental activism.
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