Nature's Altars: Mountains, Gender, And American Environmentalism

$115.41 New In stock Publisher: University Press of Kansas
SKU: DADAX0700613692
ISBN : 9780700613694
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Nature's Altars: Mountains, Gender, and American Environmentalism

Nature's Altars: Mountains, Gender, and American Environmentalism

Review"Nature's Altars reaches the heights to which it aspires. Schrepfer listens and interprets conversations about wilderness, crafting a book that informs our understanding of how gender shaped the environment. I will never again read the mountains--either in my experiences or through the writings of others--in the same way."--Journal of Social History"A fresh interpretation of the intertwined histories of mountaineering and wilderness preservation. . . . Nature's Altars should be required reading for environmental historians and will appeal to those interested in the history of outdoor recreation, environmental policy, women, and gender."--Western Historical Quarterly"An important book that expands our understanding of twentieth century conservation history. It is a splendid cultural excursion very much worth taking."--American Historical Review"Schrepfer's informative, accessible study provides readers with a solid history connecting American environmentalism, gender ideologies, and wilderness encounters, mostly in the form of mountain climbing, from the 1860s to the 1960s. Using memoirs, climbing narratives, maps, and photographs Schrepfer skilfuly weaves historical information about Americans' experience with mountains (both male and female) and cultural notions of gender using American environmental history as a bedrock for this examination. This book expands our knowledge of U.S. environmental history, and contributes to discussions on gender and environmentalism. This book is well-researched and revelatory in its revisioning of early American environmentalism and culture, disclosing how mountain narratives are gendered in their connection to experiences with the natural world. . . . Ultimately, [the book] centralizes women's involvement, and notions of gender in American environmental history, revealing the ways in which they have shaped and sustained ideas of, and practices with the natural world."--Environmental Ethics"Scholars and students of both American women's history and environmental history will find much in this ambitious and important study to ponder, debate, and celebrate."--American Historical Review"A fresh and incisive book that may be the best monograph in U.S. environmental history yet to appear to use gender as its central category of analysis. Together with Virginia Scharff's edited collection Seeing Nature through Gender, Schrepfer's book will help propel a new wave of work integrating gender analysis with environmental history. . . . However sophisticated the underlying arguments are, the book is a grounded, lively, and embodied narrative. It recounts lived experiences, often harrowing and dramatic, of men and women in the mountains. It is an engaging read, and one that would make a superb introduction to undergraduates of environmental history, the importance of the wilderness idea, and the significance of gender as a social reality and a way to investigate the past. . . . Schrepfer does much to put on the table the ways class, racial and gendered identities shaped experiences of and perspectives on wilderness in the twentieth century."--Reviews in American History"Schrepfer has given us an outstanding example of how to use the techniques of gender history to illuminate traditional environmental history topics--in this case, mountain climbing and wilderness preservation. Schrepfer's approach is at once social and cultural. . . . Schrepfer's singular contribution here is her rescue of feminine perspectives on mountains from the late-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. . . . Good books are those that offer new insights into the past and provide grist for ongoing debates. Nature's Altars gives us both, and no environmental or social historian should miss it."--Environmental History"In this innovative study of men and women recreationists who confronted mountains and wilderness directly, Schrepfer defines experience in nature through the lens of gender. . . . An important contributi

Specification of Nature's Altars: Mountains, Gender, and American Environmentalism

GENERAL
AuthorSchrepfer, Susan R.
Bindinghardcover
Languageenglish
Edition1st Edition
ISBN-10700613692
ISBN-139780700613694
PublisherUniversity Press of Kansas
Publication Year02-05-2005

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