The Nature Fakers: Wildlife, Science & Sentiment

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University of Virginia Press, 2001 - 255 páginas

In 1903 John Burroughs published an Atlantic Monthly article attacking popular nature writers--among them William J. Long and Jack London--as "sham naturalists."

The spirited "nature fakers" controversy that ensued reveals much about public attitudes toward nature at the time. Burroughs's argument that the writers invented facts and reported them as the gospel truth prompted a public literary debate, fueled by the avid participation of the nation's leading magazines and newspapers, and President Theodore Roosevelt's own denunciation of the 'faker' contingent. At issue was the conflict between science and sentiment as methods of understanding the creatures of the wild.

Ultimately, as Ralph Lutts demonstrates in The Nature Fakers, the dialogue resulted in a new standard of accuracy for the responsible nature writer and reflected a new way of thinking about moral responsibilities to wildlife.

 

Índice

1The Rise of the Nature Lovers
1
2John Burroughs and William J LongThe Battle Begins
37
3Telling the Animals from the Wildflowers
69
4Roosevelts War with the Nature Fakers
101
5In Search of an Earthly Eden
139
6Their Paths Diverge
177
The Fakers Today
189
Bibliography of William J Long
205
Index
243
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Sobre el autor (2001)

Ralph H. Lutts is an independent scholar of environmental history and environmental humanities, and a part-time instructor at Virginia Tech, the University of Virginia, and Goddard College. He is also the editor of The Wild Animal Story: Animals, Culture, and Society.

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