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Saving America's Wildlife - Ecology and the American Mind, 1850-1990 (Paperback, Reprint)
Loot Price: R1,318
Discovery Miles 13 180
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Saving America's Wildlife - Ecology and the American Mind, 1850-1990 (Paperback, Reprint)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Donate to Against Period Poverty
Total price: R1,328
Discovery Miles: 13 280
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Not another species-by-species status report or conservationist
prescription for action, this more original undertaking is an
interdisciplinary history of American "nature myths," or attitudes
toward nature, especially predatory animals, and of the role of
federal scientist-bureaucrats in shaping, applying, and sometimes
resisting the changing popular views and factional pressures.
Dunlap's real focus is on public policy, as set and practiced by
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (earlier the Bureau of
Biological Survey), and on the individuals who have played key
roles in the agency; but his chosen purview ranges from
developments in science (the rise of Darwinism; the emergence of
ecology as a discipline and a movement; the growing
professionalization of biology) to popular animal stories and shows
(from the fiction of Ernest Thompson Seton and Thornton W. Burgess
to Disney's nature movies and TV's Wild Kingdom). He also looks at
the elements and interests that shaped the agency's policies -
among them hunters' demands for conservation, wool-growers' demands
for predator control (creating basic contradictions within an
agency dedicated to both saving and exterminating wildlife), the
humane movement's campaigns against wolf and coyote traps and
poisons, the rising consciousness of conservationist organizations,
and the policies surrounding passage of the Endangered Species Act.
Toward the end, Dunlap notes that whereas the once-maligned
predators are now better understood and widely defended, "pro-wolf
sentiment is [still] strongest where the animal [is] not and never
will be." At the least, Dunlap has compiled an interesting and
useful record of bureaucracy in context and in action. And if his
treatment of broad intellectual currents and popular attitudes
stops short of sophisticated theory or analysis, it considerably
enlarges his evenhanded and conscientiously researched study of the
complex relationships at work. (Kirkus Reviews)
Through an account of evolving ideas about wolves and coyotes,
Thomas Dunlap shows how American attitudes toward animals have
changed.
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