Forest & Garden: Traces of Wildness in a Modernizing Land, 1897-1949

forest & garden: traces of wildness in a modernizing land, 1897-1949

more information about Forest & Garden: Traces of Wildness in a Modernizing Land, 1897-1949

Forest & Garden: Traces of Wildness in a Modernizing Land, 1897-1949

Editorial Reviews
Roderick Frasier Nash, University of California, Santa Barbara, author of Wilderness and the American Mind
"[G]ives us a graceful and detailed review of the mixture of wildness and control in the American environment."

Book Description
"In wildness is the preservation of the world," wrote Henry David Thoreau. But how the wild and the managed or artificially arranged environments coexist has been a matter of intense debate among foresters and landscape professionals at least since the era of Frederick Law Olmsted Sr.

In Forest and Garden, Melanie L. Simo ranges through a period of landscape history that has been underexamined, between Olmsted and mid-twentieth-century modernism, when the contours of the debate were formed and the landscape professions came of age. Simo's book spans half a century, from the year that Charles Sprague Sargent's influential Garden and Forest magazine ceased publication in 1897 to the appearance in 1949 of two unusual books about land and landscape--Aldo Leopold's Sand County Almanac and Jens Jensen's The Clearing--that marked the beginning of a new ecological awareness.

Forest and Garden covers this middle ground by focusing on the apparent oppositions between culture and nature, city and country, science and art, and between professions peopled with figures such as John Muir, Gifford Pinchot, the Olmsteds, Mary Austin, Willa Cather, Bernard Maybeck, Frank Lloyd Wright, Henry Beston, and Benton MacKaye. In this earlier era when novelists, conservationists, foresters, and landscape designers still shared a common language, Simo finds areas of overlap in how their writings express their perceptions of the land, its uses, its beauty, and its fate. Organizing her study by region and landscape type, from desert and prairie to Metropolitan New York and Boston, and extending from ecological concerns in garden design to Leopold's call for a land ethic, Simo moves beyond the polarized views of current environmental debate.

Forest & Garden: Traces of Wildness in a Modernizing Land, 1897-1949

Forest & Garden: Traces of Wildness in a Modernizing Land, 1897-1949,Melanie Louise Simo,University Press of Virginia,0813921597,Architecture,Effect of human beings on,History,History - General,Landscape,Landscape architecture,Landscape changes,Nature,United States

Book Contents:

  1. Garden Ideas
  2. Gardening for Flower Arrangement
  3. Gardening From Berryfields (Gardeners' World)
  4. Gardens of Georgia
  5. Gardens of Philadelphia & the Delaware Valley
  6. Gardens Through Time: Celebrate 200 Years of Gardening with the Royal Horticultural Society
  7. Garden Survival Guide: Pacific Northwest
  8. HEIRLOOM FLOWERS : VINTAGE FLOWERS FOR MODERN GARDENS
  9. Hostas (New Plant Library)
  10. In Full View: Three Ways of Seeing California Plants

Book Contents

Book Contents

Recommended Books

  1. Enchanted Circles : Flower Garlands, Swags and Wreaths
  2. Marvel Adventures Spider-Man Vol. 3: Doom With a View
  3. Hollywood Musicals, The Film Reader
  4. Mastering Digital Photography and Imaging
  5. Managing Tough Times Super Series, Fourth Edition
  6. Mobius and his Band : Mathematics and Astronomy in Nineteenth-Century Germany
  7. Freezing and Melting
  8. Iron in Aluminium Alloys: Impurity and Alloying Element
  9. Master of Ballantrae
  10. Ordinary Miracles in Nursing
  11. Heywood-wakefield Blond: Depression to '50s
  12. Homefront Inside Out
  13. Nakajima Ki-44 Shoki in Japanese Army Air Force Service
  14. Industrializing Knowledge: University-Industry Linkages in Japan and the United States
  15. Lonely Planet Hawaii