Anatomy of a Conflict: Identity, Knowledge, and Emotion in Old-Growth Forests

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UBC Press, 1 dec. 2013 - 208 pagini

Anatomy of a Conflict explores the cultural aspects of the fierce dispute between activist loggers and environmentalists over the fate of Oregon's temperate rain forest. Centred on the practice of old-growth logging and the survival of the northern spotted owl, the conflict has lead to the burning down of ranger stations, the spiking of trees, logging truck blockades, and countless demonstrations and arrests.

Satterfield shows how the debate about the forest is, at its core, a debate about the cultural make-up of the Pacific Northwest. To talk about forests is to talk about culture, whether the discussion is about scientific explanations of conifer forests, activists' grassroots status and their emotional attachment to land, or the implications of past people's land use for future forest management. An engaging ethnographic study, this book emphasizes the historical roots and contemporary emergence of identity movements as a means for challenging cultural patterns. It makes a significant contribution to culture- and identity-driven theories of human action in the context of social movements and environmental studies.

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Cuprins

Disturbances in the Field and the Defining of Social Movements
38
Negotiating Agency and the Quest for Grassroots Legitimacy
63
Voodoo Science and Common Sense
81
Defining the Past and Imagining the Possible
99
Emotions Ethics and the Ecocentred Self
135
The Triangular Shape of Cultural Production
160
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Despre autor (2013)

Terre Satterfield is a research scientist with Decision Research in Eugene, Oregon, and Assistant Professor of Culture, Risk, and the Environment at the University of British Columbia's Sustainable Development Research Institute, and at the Institute for Resources and the Environment.

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