Title: The trouble with wilderness
1The trouble with wilderness
- By William Cronon, in Uncommon Ground
Rethinking the Human Place in Nature. - EHUF 362 Lecture 5
2The idea of wilderness has been a fundamental
tenet of the environmental movement for decades.
- that last place where civilization (the human
disease) has not infected the earth - the place we can turn to for escape
- Henry David Thoreau In wildness is the
preservation of the world.
3Actually, wilderness is a human creation
- Created by particular human cultures
- At particular times in history
- 250 years ago there were few people wandering the
remote corners of the earth looking for the
wilderness experience.
4Terror
- In the late 18th century, wilderness referred to
places that were desolate, deserted, savage,
barren, wastelands. - In the King James Bible, wilderness was used over
and over again to refer to places on the margin
of civilization, where it was all too easy to
lose ones self in confusion and despair. - Wilderness was a place one came to against ones
will, and in fear and trembling.
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8By the end of the 19th century, wilderness had
changed
- Wilderness had once been referred to as the
darkness at the edge of Paradise, into which Adam
and Eve were driven. - Now it was frequently referred to as Eden itself.
9People began to trek to sites that had been
designated as places of wild beauty
- Niagara Falls
- Catskills
- Adirondacks
- Yosemite (in 1864, nations first wildland park)
- Yellowstone (in 1872, first true national park)
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15Hetch Hetchy
- Most famous episode in American conservation
history - In first decade of 20th century
- City of San Francisco proposed to dam the
Tuolumne R. in the Hetch Hetchy valley, well
within Yosemite National Park
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22Hetch Hetchy lost
- John Muir led fight, but lost.
- The damming galvanized the emerging movement to
preserve wilderness. - 50 years earlier, few people would have
questioned reclaiming such a wasteland. - Muir portrayed it as desecration flooding the
valley was the work of the Devil.
23Sources of transformation of the perception of
wilderness
24The sublime
- Sublime landscapes in the 18th century were those
in which one had more chances to glimpse the face
of God. - Sacred places
- If Satan was there, then so was Christ
- Places of grandeur, great beauty
- Mountain as cathedral
25- By the time of Muir, wilderness was becoming more
of a romantic concept of the domesticated
sublime. - The sublime wilderness ceased being a place of
Satanic temptations and became a sacred temple.
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33The national myth of the frontier
- May have its roots in the primitivism of Rosseau
the belief that the best antidote to the ills of
civilization is a return to simple, more
primitive living.
34The frontier and American character
- Historian Frederick Jackson Turner in 1893
described the way the frontier molded the
national character - Easterners and Europeans moved west into wild
unsettled lands - They shed civilization
- Rediscovered primitive racial energies
- Reinvented direct democratic institutions
- Reinforced themselves with a vigor, independence
and creativity that were the source of American
Democracy and national character
35The frontier was temporary
- Based on free land
- In the myth of the vanishing frontier lay the
seeds of wilderness preservation - Set-asides for national parks occurred just when
sentiment about passing frontier peaked - Individual freedom was an important theme
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47How invented is the idea of American wilderness?
- The fact that Indians had to be removed from it
remind us how artificial it is. - A flight from history a place to escape from our
world and past. - The dream of an unworked natural landscape is
usually had by people who never had to work the
land to eat.
48Central paradox
- Wilderness embodies a vision in which the human
is entirely outside the natural if nature is
wild, our presence there is its downfall. Where
we are is where nature is not.
49- William Cronon
- If nature and humans are on two poles, we will
never discover what the ethical, sustainable
human place in nature is.
50A common perspective is that nature, to be
natural, must be pristine.
- But, people have been manipulating the natural
world for as long as we have a record of people. - And, many environmental changes we now face have
occurred quite apart from human intervention in
the earths past.
51Idealizing a distant wilderness means not
idealizing the environment where we live
- Most environmental problems are at home.
- We need an environmental ethic that tells us as
much about using nature as it does about not
using it. - Wildness there are plenty of wild things where
we live.