Earth First! Journal 20, no. 3

Authors

  • James Johnston

Keywords:

activism, bears, wolves, journalism, conservation, deforestation, nonviolent resistance, political ecology, protests, wilderness

Abstract

Johnston, James, et al., eds., Earth First! Journal 20, no. 3 (1 February 2000). Republished by the Environment & Society Portal, Multimedia Library. http://www.environmentandsociety.org/node/7051.

In this issue of Earth First! Journal Christopher Genovali of the Raincoast Conservation Society sheds light on the disturbing absence of grizzly bears in British Columbia, Erica Sweetwater discusses wolf reintroduction in the Adirondacks, and Errol Schweizer interviews Chellis Glendinning on environmentalism and sovereignty. 

"Human beings literally evolved in unmediated participation with the natural world. We came to be who we are, not in a city, not surrounded by concrete or in a room, but in nature. In essence, we are as natural as a deer or a pine tree, and this realization I think offers a launching place for remaking our reunion with the natural world. You know that in Native languages there is no word for “wilderness” or “wild.” The separation of human from nature is an artifact of Western urban-based thought. So, we begin with knowing we are not a cancer on the planet, but rather its sons and its daughters."

— Chellis Glendinning  

The Rachel Carson Center’s Environment & Society Portal makes archival materials openly accessible for purposes of research and education. Views expressed in these materials do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of the Rachel Carson Center or its partners.

Earth First! Fist, Volume 20

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Published

2000-02-01

Issue

Section

Journal