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Roots of American Environmentalism With an Introduction, Notes, and
Critical Commentary Roots of American Environmentalism is an
anthology that explores the various attitudes toward land and its
use from the American colonial period to the end of the nineteenth
century. The major focus is on the differing concepts of "land,"
"wilderness," and "nature" and the way they are represented in
historical texts. In order to facilitate access to the historical
text, each is provided with a commentary that focuses on its
significance for environmental issues. In selecting the texts
included here, the editors have concentrated on three major
archetypes in the attitudes toward the American environment: the
primitive, as represented in James Fenimore Cooper's frontier hero,
Natty Bumppo, the pastoral, as represented in Jonathan Chapman,
better known as Johnny Appleseed, and the commercial, as
represented in Washington Irving's restless Yankee, Ichabod Crane.
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