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Available5.0
40 reviewsISBN 10: 0823254259
ISBN 13: 9780823254255
Author: Forrest Clingerman, Brian Treanor, Martin Drenthen, David Utsler
Modern environmentalism has come to realize that many of its key concerns—“wilderness” and “nature” among them—are contested territory, viewed differently by different people. Understanding nature requires science and ecology, to be sure, but it also requires a sensitivity to history, culture, and narrative. Thus, understanding nature is a fundamentally hermeneutic task.
Part I: Interpretation and the Task of Thinking Environmentally
1 Environmental Hermeneutics Deep in the Forest
2 Morrow’s Ants: E. O. Wilson and Gadamer’s Critique of (Natural) Historicism
3 Layering: Body, Building, Biography
4 Might Nature Be Interpreted as a “Saturated Phenomenon”?
5 Must Environmental Philosophy Relinquish the Concept of Nature? A Hermeneutic Reply to Steven Voge
Part II: Situating the Self
6 Environmental Hermeneutics and Environmental/Eco-Psychology: Explorations in Environmental Identit
7 Environmental Hermeneutics with and for Others: Ricoeur’s Ethics and the Ecological Self
8 Bodily Moods and Unhomely Environments: The Hermeneutics of Agoraphobia and the Spirit of Place
Part III: Narrativity and Image
9 Narrative and Nature: Appreciating and Understanding the Nonhuman World
10 The Question Concerning Nature
11 New Nature Narratives: Landscape Hermeneutics and Environmental Ethics
Part IV: Environments, Place, and the Experience of Time
12 Memory, Imagination, and the Hermeneutics of Place
13 The Betweenness of Monuments
14 My Place in the Sun
15 How Hermeneutics Might Save the Life of (Environmental) Ethics
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Tags: Forrest Clingerman, Brian Treanor, Martin Drenthen, David Utsler, nature, emerging