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ISBN: HB: 9780300197464

Yale University Press

February 2015

320 pp.

23.4x15.6 cm

19 black&white illus.

HB:
£53,00
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Back to the Garden

Nature and the Mediterranean World from Prehistory to the Present

The garden was the cultural foundation of the early Mediterranean peoples; they acknowledged their reliance on and kinship to the land, and they understood nature through the lens of their diversely cultivated landscape. Their image of the garden underwrote the biblical book of Genesis and the region's three major religions. In this important melding of cultural and ecological histories, James McGregor suggests that the environmental crisis the world faces today is a result of Western society's abandonment of the "First Nature" principle, of the historic, harmonious interrelationship of human and ecological communities. The author demonstrates how this relationship, which persisted for millennia, effectively came to an end in the late eighteenth century, when "nature" came to be equated with untamed landscape devoid of human intervention. McGregor's essential work offers a new understanding of environmental accountability while proposing that recovering the original vision of ourselves, not as antagonists of nature but as cultivators of a biological world to which we innately belong, is possible through proven techniques of the past.

About the Author

James H. S. McGregor is the author of five books on world cities. He is emeritus professor of comparative literature at the University of Georgia and lives in Cambridge, MA.

Reviews

"James McGregor's work on Mediterranean deep history is an exhaustive and highly convincing presentation of the sophistication and sustainability of our old Neolithic European cultures before the 'disaster' that civilization proved to be, overwhelmed them all" – Gary Snyder