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An 800-CEO-READ "Editor's Choice" March 2019 How We Can Harness
Carbon to Help Solve the Climate Crisis In order to rescue
ourselves from climate catastrophe, we need to radically alter how
humans live on Earth. We have to go from spending carbon to banking
it. We have to put back the trees, wetlands, and corals. We have to
regrow the soil and turn back the desert. We have to save whales,
wombats, and wolves. We have to reverse the flow of greenhouse
gases and send them in exactly the opposite direction: down, not
up. We have to flip the carbon cycle and run it backwards. For such
a revolutionary transformation we’ll need civilization 2.0. A
secret unlocked by the ancients of the Amazon for its ability to
transform impoverished tropical soils into terra preta—fertile
black earths—points the way. The indigenous custom of converting
organic materials into long lasting carbon has enjoyed a
reawakening in recent decades as the quest for more sustainable
farming methods has grown. Yet the benefits of this carbonized
material, now called biochar, extend far beyond the soil.
Pyrolyzing carbon has the power to restore a natural balance by
unmining the coal and undrilling the oil and gas. Employed to its
full potential, it can run the carbon cycle in reverse and remake
Earth as a garden planet. Burn looks beyond renewable biomass or
carbon capture energy systems to offer a bigger and bolder vision
for the next phase of human progress, moving carbon from wasted
sources: into soils and agricultural systems to rebalance the
carbon, nitrogen, and related cycles; enhance nutrient density in
food; rebuild topsoil; and condition urban and agricultural lands
to withstand flooding and drought to cleanse water by carbon
filtration and trophic cascades within the world’s rivers,
oceans, and wetlands to shift urban infrastructures such as
buildings, roads, bridges, and ports, incorporating drawdown
materials and components, replacing steel, concrete, polymers, and
composites with biological carbon to drive economic reorganization
by incentivizing carbon drawdown Fully developed, this approach
costs nothing—to the contrary, it can save companies money or
provide new revenue streams. It contains the seeds of a new,
circular economy in which energy, natural resources, and human
ingenuity enter a virtuous cycle of improvement. Burn offers bold
new solutions to climate change that can begin right now. Â
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
Edited by Mary Louise Lord after the author's death, The Singer
Resumes the Tale focuses on the performance of stories and poems
within settings that range from ancient Greek palaces to Latvian
villages. Lord expounds and develops his approach to oral
literature in this book, responds systematically for the first time
to criticisms of oral theory, and extends his methods to the
analysis of lyric poems. He also considers the implications of the
transitional text - a work made up of both oral and literary
components. Elements of the oral tradition - the practice of
storytelling in prose or verse, the art of composing and
transmitting songs, the content of these texts, the kinds of songs
composed, and the poetics of oral literature - are discussed in the
light of several traditions, beginning in the ancient world,
through the Middle Ages, to the present. Throughout, the central
figure is always the singer. Homer, the Beowulf poet, women who
perform lyric songs, tellers of folktales, singers of such ballads
as "Barbara Allen", bards of the Balkans: all play prominent roles
in Lord's book, as they have played central roles in the creation
of this fundamental literature.
Albert Bates Lord here offers an unparalleled overview of the
nature of oral-traditional epic songs and the practices of the
singers who composed them. Shaped by the conviction that theory
should be based on what singers actually do, and have done in times
past, the essays collected here span half a century of Lord's
research on the oral tradition from Homer to the twentieth
century.
Drawing on his extensive fieldwork in living oral traditions and
on the theoretical writings of Milman Parry, Lord concentrates on
the singers and their art as manifested in texts of performance. In
thirteen essays, some previously unpublished and all of them
revised for book publication, he explores questions of composition,
transmittal, and interpretation and raises important comparative
issues. Individual chapters discuss aspects of the Homeric poems,
South Slavic oral-traditional epics, the songs of Avdo Metedovic,
Beowulf and Anglo-Saxon poetry, the medieval Greek Digenis Akritas
and other medieval epics, central Asiatic and Balkan epics, the
Finnish Kalevala, and the Bulgarian oral epic.
The work of one of the most respected scholars of his
generation, Epic Singers and Oral Tradition will be an invaluable
resource for scholars and students of myth and folklore,
classicists, medievalists, Slavists, comparatists, literary
theorists, and anthropologists.
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