Description

Book Synopsis
Collection of documents revealing the significance of the years 1968-1972 to the environmental movement

Trade Review

"It is a representative collection that can supplement a textbook for American environmental history courses. . . . He rightly sees the years 1968-1972 as pivotal for the modern environmental movement. Recommended."

* Choice *

Table of Contents

Foreword by William Cronon
Acknowledgments
Introduction

Part 1. Warnings

“Air Pollution in Donora, PA: Epidemiology of the Unusual Smog Episode of October 1948, Preliminary Report”

Paul Shepard, “The Place of Nature in Man’s World,” The Atlantic Naturalist (1958)

Howard Zahniser, “Wilderness Forever” (1961)

Rachel Carson, Silent Spring (1962)

Carl Carmer, Testimony before the Federal Power Commission in the Matter of Consolidated Edison (1964)

Part 2. A Dying Planet

Paul R. Ehrlich, The Population Bomb (1968)

Stewart Brand, Whole Earth Catalog (1969)

Jack Newfield, “Lead Poisoning: Silent Epidemic in the Slums,” Village Voice (1969)

Daniel W. Hannan, Testimony before the Allegheny County Commissioners (1969)

United Auto Workers, Letter Initiating Down River Anti-Pollution League (1969)

Dr. N. K. Sanders, “The Santa Barbara Oil Spill: Impact on Environment” (1969)

Seattle–King County Department of Public Health, Annual Report, 1969

Part 3. Earth Year 59

The National Environmental Policy Act of 1969

Editorial, National Review Bulletin (1970)

Citizens Association of Beaufort County, “Is This What You Want for South Carolina’s Waters?” Columbia Record (1970)

Richard Nixon, “Special Message to the Congress on Environmental Quality” (1970)

Frank Herbert, “How Indians Would Use Fort,” Seattle Post-Intelligencer (1970)

Barry Commoner, Harvard University Lecture (1970)

Walt Kelly, Pogo Poster: “We Have Met the Enemy, and He Is Us” (1970)

Gaylord Nelson, Earth Day Speech, Denver, Colorado (1970)

Nathan Hare, “Black Ecology,” The Black Scholar (1970)

Letters from Schoolchildren to Carl Stokes, Mayor of Cleveland (1970)

Representative Louis Stokes, Address in Congress Supporting Rivers and Harbors and Flood Control Act of 1970 (1970)

Ray Osrin, “Someday Son, All This Will Be Yours,” Cleveland Plain Dealer (1970)

Eleanor Phinney, Letter to the Oregon Environmental Council (1970)

Group Against Smog and Pollution (GASP), Public Service Announcements (1970)

Clean Air Act Amendments (1970)

Part 4. Is Cata strophe Coming?

A Select Committee of the University of Montana, “Report on the Bitterroot National Forest” (1970)

Dale A. Burk, Photograph of the Bitterroot Forest, Montana (1971)

Governor Ronald Reagan, Remarks before the American Petroleum Institute (1971)

Dr. Joseph T. Ling, Testimony Regarding the Water Pollution Control Act (1971)

Council of the Southern Mountains, “We Will Stop the Bulldozers” (1972)

William O. Douglas, Dissent, Sierra Club v. Morton (1972)

John Maddox, “Is Catastrophe Coming?,” The Doomsday Syndrome (1972)

Declaration of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment (1972)

Part 5. Continuation

Jimmy Carter, “The Energy Problem: Address to the Nation” (1977)

Robert A. Roland, Statement Regarding Superfund (1979)

A Mother’s Reflections on the Love Canal Disaster (1982)

Dr. James E. Hansen, Testimony Regarding the Greenhouse Effect and Global Climate Change (1987)

Bibliographical Essay
Index

The Environmental Moment

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    A Paperback / softback by David Stradling, William Cronon

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      View other formats and editions of The Environmental Moment by David Stradling

      Publisher: University of Washington Press
      Publication Date: 28/03/2012
      ISBN13: 9780295991818, 978-0295991818
      ISBN10: 029599181X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Collection of documents revealing the significance of the years 1968-1972 to the environmental movement

      Trade Review

      "It is a representative collection that can supplement a textbook for American environmental history courses. . . . He rightly sees the years 1968-1972 as pivotal for the modern environmental movement. Recommended."

      * Choice *

      Table of Contents

      Foreword by William Cronon
      Acknowledgments
      Introduction

      Part 1. Warnings

      “Air Pollution in Donora, PA: Epidemiology of the Unusual Smog Episode of October 1948, Preliminary Report”

      Paul Shepard, “The Place of Nature in Man’s World,” The Atlantic Naturalist (1958)

      Howard Zahniser, “Wilderness Forever” (1961)

      Rachel Carson, Silent Spring (1962)

      Carl Carmer, Testimony before the Federal Power Commission in the Matter of Consolidated Edison (1964)

      Part 2. A Dying Planet

      Paul R. Ehrlich, The Population Bomb (1968)

      Stewart Brand, Whole Earth Catalog (1969)

      Jack Newfield, “Lead Poisoning: Silent Epidemic in the Slums,” Village Voice (1969)

      Daniel W. Hannan, Testimony before the Allegheny County Commissioners (1969)

      United Auto Workers, Letter Initiating Down River Anti-Pollution League (1969)

      Dr. N. K. Sanders, “The Santa Barbara Oil Spill: Impact on Environment” (1969)

      Seattle–King County Department of Public Health, Annual Report, 1969

      Part 3. Earth Year 59

      The National Environmental Policy Act of 1969

      Editorial, National Review Bulletin (1970)

      Citizens Association of Beaufort County, “Is This What You Want for South Carolina’s Waters?” Columbia Record (1970)

      Richard Nixon, “Special Message to the Congress on Environmental Quality” (1970)

      Frank Herbert, “How Indians Would Use Fort,” Seattle Post-Intelligencer (1970)

      Barry Commoner, Harvard University Lecture (1970)

      Walt Kelly, Pogo Poster: “We Have Met the Enemy, and He Is Us” (1970)

      Gaylord Nelson, Earth Day Speech, Denver, Colorado (1970)

      Nathan Hare, “Black Ecology,” The Black Scholar (1970)

      Letters from Schoolchildren to Carl Stokes, Mayor of Cleveland (1970)

      Representative Louis Stokes, Address in Congress Supporting Rivers and Harbors and Flood Control Act of 1970 (1970)

      Ray Osrin, “Someday Son, All This Will Be Yours,” Cleveland Plain Dealer (1970)

      Eleanor Phinney, Letter to the Oregon Environmental Council (1970)

      Group Against Smog and Pollution (GASP), Public Service Announcements (1970)

      Clean Air Act Amendments (1970)

      Part 4. Is Cata strophe Coming?

      A Select Committee of the University of Montana, “Report on the Bitterroot National Forest” (1970)

      Dale A. Burk, Photograph of the Bitterroot Forest, Montana (1971)

      Governor Ronald Reagan, Remarks before the American Petroleum Institute (1971)

      Dr. Joseph T. Ling, Testimony Regarding the Water Pollution Control Act (1971)

      Council of the Southern Mountains, “We Will Stop the Bulldozers” (1972)

      William O. Douglas, Dissent, Sierra Club v. Morton (1972)

      John Maddox, “Is Catastrophe Coming?,” The Doomsday Syndrome (1972)

      Declaration of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment (1972)

      Part 5. Continuation

      Jimmy Carter, “The Energy Problem: Address to the Nation” (1977)

      Robert A. Roland, Statement Regarding Superfund (1979)

      A Mother’s Reflections on the Love Canal Disaster (1982)

      Dr. James E. Hansen, Testimony Regarding the Greenhouse Effect and Global Climate Change (1987)

      Bibliographical Essay
      Index

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