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Big government, big business, big everything: Kirkpatrick Sale took
giantism to task in his 1980 classic, Human Scale, and today takes
a new look at how the crises that imperil modern America are the
inevitable result of bigness grown out of control-and what can be
done about it. The result is a keenly updated, carefully argued
case for bringing human endeavors back to scales we can comprehend
and manage-whether in our built environments, our politics, our
business endeavors, our energy plans, or our mobility. Sale walks
readers back through history to a time when buildings were scaled
to the human figure (as was the Parthenon), democracies were scaled
to the societies they served, and enterprise was scaled to
communities. Against that backdrop, he dissects the
bigger-is-better paradigm that has defined modern times and brought
civilization to a crisis point. Says Sale, retreating from our
calamity will take rebalancing our relationship to the environment;
adopting more human-scale technologies; right-sizing our buildings,
communities, and cities; and bringing our critical services-from
energy, food, and garbage collection to transportation, health, and
education-back to human scale as well. Like Small is Beautiful by
E. F. Schumacher, Human Scale has long been a classic of modern
decentralist thought and communitarian values-a key tool in the kit
of those trying to localize, create meaningful governance in
bioregions, or rethink our reverence of and dependence on growth,
financially and otherwise. Rewritten to interpret the past few
decades, Human Scale offers compelling new insights on how to turn
away from the giantism that has caused escalating ecological
distress and inequality, dysfunctional governments, and unending
warfare and shines a light on many possible pathways that could
allow us to scale down, survive, and thrive.
Kirkpatrick Sale is at the tumultuous centre of a technology
backlash, actively challenging Bill Gates on the one hand and the
Unabomber on the other. The subject of bets, barbs, and grudging
praise in the pages of WIRED, The New York Times, Newsweek, and The
New Yorker, Rebels Against the Future takes us back to the first
technology backlash, the short-lived and fierce Luddite rebellion
of 1811. Sale tells the compelling story of the Luddites'struggle
to preserve their jobs and way of life by destroying the machines
that threatened to replace them he then invokes a new-Luddite
spirit in response to today's technological revolution and calls
for another sort of rebellion: not one of violence but rather of
intellectually and ethically sound protest.
The Hill and Wang Critical Issues Series: concise, affordable works on pivotal topics in American history, society, and politics.
The Green Revolution documents the tremendous change in public awareness and attitudes since the publication of Rachel Carson's Silent Spring. Sale assesses the growth of national environmental organizations and the influence of scientists and their theories about global warming, the greenhouse effect, acid rain, toxic waste, and biodiversity. And he shows how environmental concerns affect all levels of society and much of our government's legislative and regulatory work.
Imagine a world structured around ecological and cultural
diversity, rather than national and political parameters. In
response to present and impending ecological and economic crises,
Kirkpatrick Sale offers a definitive introduction to the unique
concept of bioregionalism, an alternative way of organizing society
to create smaller scale, more ecologically sound, individually
responsive communities with renewable economies and cultures. He
emphasizes, among many other factors, the concept of regionalism
through natural population division, settlement near and
stewardship of watershed areas, and the importance of communal
ownership of and responsibility for the land. "Dwellers in the
Land" focuses on the realistic development of these bioregionally
focused communities and the places where they are established to
create a society that is both ecologically sustainable and
satisfying to its inhabitants.
When did the human species turn against the planet that we depend
on for survival? Human industry and consumption of resources have
altered the climate, polluted the water and soil, destroyed
ecosystems, and rendered many species extinct, vastly increasing
the likelihood of an ecological catastrophe. How did humankind come
to rule nature to such an extent? To regard the planet's resources
and creatures as ours for the taking? To find ourselves on a
seemingly relentless path toward ecocide?In After Eden, Kirkpatrick
Sale answers these questions in a radically new way. Integrating
research in paleontology, archaeology, and anthropology, he points
to the beginning of big-game hunting as the origin of Homo sapiens'
estrangement from the natural world. Sale contends that a new,
recognizably modern human culture based on the hunting of large
animals developed in Africa some 70,000 years ago in response to a
fierce plunge in worldwide temperature triggered by an enormous
volcanic explosion in Asia. Tracing the migration of populations
and the development of hunting thousands of years forward in time,
he shows that hunting became increasingly adversarial in relation
to the environment as people fought over scarce prey during
Europe's glacial period between 35,000 and 10,000 years ago. By the
end of that era, humans' idea that they were the superior species
on the planet, free to exploit other species toward their own ends,
was well established. After Eden is a sobering tale, but not one
without hope. Sale asserts that Homo erectus, the variation of the
hominid species that preceded Homo sapiens and survived for nearly
two million years, did not attempt to dominate the environment. He
contends that vestiges of this more ecologically sound way of life
exist today-in some tribal societies, in the central teachings of
Hinduism and Buddhism, and in the core principles of the worldwide
environmental movement-offering redemptive possibilities for
ourselves and for the planet.
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