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One of the physical costs of our society's breakneck consumption,
sprawl, and technological innovation and production is the
increasing amount of terrain relegated to accommodating the
resulting waste and wasted space. These "marginal landscapes" can
be divided into four distinct categories: sinks; ruins or abandoned
land; toxic or damaged land; and waste landscapes. Although
Professor Engler discusses all four types, she is concerned mostly
with waste landscapes - "landfills, recycling and waste transfer
centers, and sewage treatment plants," as she addresses two
distinct aspects of waste landscapes: 1) the historic and cultural
context of waste, and 2) the professional planning practices and
aesthetic concerns of those who deal with waste and its landscapes.
Ultimately, Professor Engler seeks to change our ideas about waste
places through her discussion of how landscape design can function
within the scientific and technological parameters of safety and
environmental concerns to make waste places more central to our
thinking and perception. In so doing, she reviews the physical
evolution of waste sites, and scrutinizes perceptions and
representations of these landscapes, and grounds her ideas in
critiques of what environmental designers and artists have done
recently with waste places to change public perceptions. Designing
America's Waste Landscapes is a pioneering and original work that
will appeal to professional planners and landscape designers, and
students and scholars in landscape design and planning,
environmental studies, urban studies, cultural geography, and even
the history of technology.
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