The accelerating interpenetration of nature and culture is the hallmark of the new "light-green" social order that has emerged in postwar France, argues Michael Bess in this penetrating new history. On one hand, a preoc...

Buy Now From Amazon

The accelerating interpenetration of nature and culture is the hallmark of the new "light-green" social order that has emerged in postwar France, argues Michael Bess in this penetrating new history. On one hand, a preoccupation with natural qualities and equilibrium has increasingly infused France's economic and cultural life. On the other, human activities have laid an ever more potent and pervasive touch on the environment, whether through the intrusion of agriculture, industry, and urban growth, or through the much subtler and more well-intentioned efforts of ecological management.

The Light-Green Society limns sharply these trends over the last fifty years. The rise of environmentalism in the 1960s stemmed from a fervent desire to "save" wild nature-nature conceived as a qualitatively distinct domain, wholly separate from human designs and endeavors. And yet, Bess shows, after forty years of environmentalist agitation, much of it remarkably successful in achieving its aims, the old conception of nature as a "separate sphere" has become largely untenable. In the light-green society, where ecology and technological modernity continually flow together, a new hybrid vision of intermingled nature-culture has increasingly taken its place.


Similar Products

The Rhine: An Eco-biography, 1815-2000 (Weyerhaeuser Environmental Books)Unfinished Utopia: Nowa Huta, Stalinism, and Polish Society, 1949-56Plutopia: Nuclear Families, Atomic Cities, and the Great Soviet and American Plutonium DisastersArming Mother Nature: The Birth of Catastrophic EnvironmentalismChildren of the Sun:  A History of Humanity's Unappeasable Appetite For EnergyOur Roots Run Deep as Ironweed: Appalachian Women and the Fight for Environmental JusticeThe Bulldozer in the Countryside: Suburban Sprawl and the Rise of American Environmentalism (Studies in Environment and History)Something New Under the Sun: An Environmental History of the Twentieth-Century World (The Global Century Series)