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The Holy Earth: The Birth of a New Land Ethic
Paperback

The Holy Earth: The Birth of a New Land Ethic

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The agrarian tradition runs as an undercurrent through the entire history of literature, carrying the age-old wisdom that the necessary access of independent farmers to their own land both requires the responsibility of good stewardship and provides the foundation for a thriving civilization. At the turn of the last century, when farming first began to face the most rapid and extensive series of changes that industrialization would bring, the most compelling and humane voice representing the agrarian tradition came from the botanist, farmer, philosopher, and public intellectual Liberty Hyde Bailey. In 1915, Bailey’s environmental manifesto, The Holy Earth, addressed the industrialization of society by utilizing the full range of human vocabulary to assert that the earth’s processes and products, because they form the governing conditions of human life, should therefore be understood not first as economic, but as divine. To grasp the extent of human responsibility for the earth, Bailey called for a new hold that society must take to develop a morals of land management, which would later inspire Aldo Leopold’s land ethic and several generations of agrarian voices. This message of responsible land stewardship has never been as timely as now.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Counterpoint
Country
United States
Date
15 December 2015
Pages
144
ISBN
9781619025875

The agrarian tradition runs as an undercurrent through the entire history of literature, carrying the age-old wisdom that the necessary access of independent farmers to their own land both requires the responsibility of good stewardship and provides the foundation for a thriving civilization. At the turn of the last century, when farming first began to face the most rapid and extensive series of changes that industrialization would bring, the most compelling and humane voice representing the agrarian tradition came from the botanist, farmer, philosopher, and public intellectual Liberty Hyde Bailey. In 1915, Bailey’s environmental manifesto, The Holy Earth, addressed the industrialization of society by utilizing the full range of human vocabulary to assert that the earth’s processes and products, because they form the governing conditions of human life, should therefore be understood not first as economic, but as divine. To grasp the extent of human responsibility for the earth, Bailey called for a new hold that society must take to develop a morals of land management, which would later inspire Aldo Leopold’s land ethic and several generations of agrarian voices. This message of responsible land stewardship has never been as timely as now.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Counterpoint
Country
United States
Date
15 December 2015
Pages
144
ISBN
9781619025875