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Theodore Roosevelt's scientific curiosity and love of the outdoors
proved a defining force throughout his hectic life as a rancher and
explorer, police commissioner and governor of New York, vice
president and president of the United States. Conservation and
natural history were parts of a whole for this driven, charismatic
public servant, and Roosevelt approached the natural world with joy
and a passionate engagement. Drawing on an array of
approaches-biographical, ecological and environmental, literary and
political, Theodore Roosevelt, Naturalist in the Arena analyzes
this energetic man's manifold encounters with the great outdoors.
George Bird Grinnell, Gifford Pinchot, John Muir, and William
Hornaday were among the many conservationists with whom Roosevelt
corresponded, collaborated, hiked, and governed-and in turn,
inspired. Together, Roosevelt and his contemporaries developed a
progressive argument for the conservation of natural resources as a
way to construct a more democratic nation-state. This legacy also
comes with some troubling domestic and global implications, as
Roosevelt fused his call for the conservation of resources-natural
and human, domestically and internationally-with a deep-seated
conviction that some were more fit than others to control the world
and define its future.
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