Quotation by William D. Ruckelshaus, first Environmental Protection Agency Chief Administrator

"Using one discipline to address the environment isn't going to work.  You have to use them all."  ---William D. Ruckelshaus, first Environmental Protection Agency chief Administrator, 1970-1973, also 1983-85, speaking to "Living on Earth," broadcast through Public Radio International

Reviews of the Book

"Until the publication . . . of Environment: An Interdisciplinary Anthology, those searching for an overview of the field had few texts to which they might turn .... "

-Rochelle Johnson in Thoreau Society Bulletin for Fall 2008

More Reviews and Comments

Remarks by the Publisher:

"A comprehensive guide to environmental literacy."

 

Selected as a 2008 AAUP University Press Book for Public and Secondary School Libraries.

Events

- Professor James Engell to teach a DuPont Seminar at the National Humanities Center, Research Triangle Park, NC, on Environmental issues and the humanities ...
- Professor Glenn Adelson to attend the Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE) meeting ...

Video Focus

Chapter 17: Ethics, Philosophy, Gender (no headnote) PDF Print E-mail

[No headnote]


Full introduction to the chapter Go


Selections in this chapter:

  • Kate Soper, from What Is Nature? Culture, Politics, and the Non-Human (1995), [596] Go
  • Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, from “Formation and Transformation” (1817–24), translated by Bertha Mueller, [602] Go
  • Ralph Waldo Emerson, from Nature (1836) and from “The Method of Nature” (1841), [603] Go
  • John Muir, from “Hetch Hetchy Valley” in The Yosemite (1912), [606] Go
  • Aldo Leopold, from “The Land Ethic” in A Sand County Almanac (1949), [608] Go
  • Richard Lewontin, from “Organism and Environment” (1982), [612] Go

 

Web Connections Go


Recommended further reading Go

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