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Intemperate Rainforest: Nature, Culture, and Power on Canada’s West Coast
Bruce Braun
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Description for Intemperate Rainforest: Nature, Culture, and Power on Canada’s West Coast
Paperback. Num Pages: 352 pages, Illustrations, maps. BIC Classification: RNA. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 222 x 152 x 25. Weight in Grams: 480.
An exciting new approach to environmental politics
Save the rainforest—not a question but a statement of fact. What good environmentalist would ever dispute it? Bruce Braun does; he goes so far as to ask, what is the rainforest? Who defines it? He examines the various practices—social, discursive, and political—through which Canada’s West Coast forests have been given meaning and made the site of intense political and ideological struggle. Departing from other work on environmental politics that assumes the "forest" is a constant, The Intemperate Rainforest traces the way West Coast landscapes have been viewed and controlled by explorers, foresters, environmentalists, artists, ... Read more
In 1993, dramatic political protests over logging in Clayoquot Sound in British Columbia propelled Canada’s temperate rainforests onto the global stage. Celebrities and rock bands joined protests that, with over eight hundred arrests, were some of the largest acts of civil disobedience in Canadian history. Moving between these events and the histories and practices that produced these forest spaces, Braun reveals a complex postcolonial landscape in which a conventional politics of wilderness preservation is found lacking. Bringing environmental studies into conversation with poststructuralist theory and postcolonial studies leads to a dynamic understanding of the forest as a historically contingent, politically charged object. Braun demonstrates how constructions of the forest are inextricably entangled with culture, race, nation, class, and colonialism in ways that trouble conventional approaches to nature and politics. Often portrayed as pristine landscape, he shows the forest to be an intensely cultural space inseparable from the primitivist fantasies, scientific discourses, and indigenous knowledges that constitute it. Displacing the language of wilderness, Braun proposes understanding the forest as a hybrid object that cannot be assigned to either "nature" or "culture" and cannot be understood apart from the relations of power that infuse it. Show LessProduct Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2002
Publisher
University of Minnesota Press United States
Number of pages
352
Condition
New
Number of Pages
366
Place of Publication
Minnesota, United States
ISBN
9780816634002
SKU
V9780816634002
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-1
About Bruce Braun
Bruce Braun is assistant professor of geography at the University of Minnesota. He is the coeditor of Re-making Reality: Nature at the Millennium (1998) and Social Nature: Theory, Practice, and Politics (2001).
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