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LifePlace : bioregional thought and practice / / Robert L. Thayer, Jr



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Autore: Thayer Robert L Visualizza persona
Titolo: LifePlace : bioregional thought and practice / / Robert L. Thayer, Jr Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Berkeley : , : University of California Press, , 2003
©2003
Edizione: 1st ed.
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (xvii, 300 pages) : illustrations, maps
Disciplina: 333.7/2
Soggetto topico: Bioregionalism
Soggetto non controllato: bioregional movement
bioregionalism
california
case study
environmental studies
fauna and flora
indigenous peoples
local agriculture
local economies
local geography
local living
local residents
modern lives
natural living
natural world
nonfiction
place history
putah cache watershed
regional ecology
regional history
sacramento valley
social and cultural
sustainable business
sustainable living
textbooks
work and play
working locally
Nota di bibliografia: Includes bibliographical references (p. 283-293) and index.
Nota di contenuto: Front matter -- Contents -- Illustrations -- Preface -- Introduction. Bioregional Thinking -- 1. Grounding. Finding the Physical Place -- 2. Living. Awakening to a Live Region -- 3. Re-inhabiting. Recovering a Bioregional Culture -- 4. Fulfilling. Celebrating the Spirit of Place -- 5. Imagining. Creating Art of the Life-Place -- 6. Trading. Exchanging Natural Values -- 7. Planning. Designing a Life-Place -- 8. Building. Making Bioregions Work -- 9. Learning. Spreading Local Wisdom -- 10. Acting. Taking Personal Responsibility -- Notes -- General Bibliography -- Index
Sommario/riassunto: Robert Thayer brings the concepts and promises of the growing bioregional movement to a wide audience in a book that passionately urges us to discover "where we are" as an antidote to our rootless, stressful modern lives. Life Place is a provocative meditation on bioregionalism and what it means to live, work, eat, and play in relation to naturally, rather than politically, defined areas. In it, Thayer gives a richly textured portrait of his own home, the Putah-Cache watershed in California's Sacramento Valley, demonstrating how bioregionalism can be practiced in everyday life. Written in a lively anecdotal style and expressing a profound love of place, this book is a guide to the personal rewards and the social benefits of re-inhabiting the natural world on a local scale. In LifePlace, Thayer shares what he has learned over the course of thirty years about the Sacramento Valley's geography, minerals, flora, and fauna; its relation to fire, agriculture, and water; and its indigenous peoples, farmers, and artists. He shows how the spirit of bioregionalism springs from learning the history of a place, from participating in its local economy, from living in housing designed in the context of the region. He asks: How can we instill a love of place and knowledge of the local into our education system? How can the economy become more responsive to the ecology of region? This valuable book is also a window onto current writing on bioregionalism, introducing the ideas of its most notable proponents in accessible and highly engaging prose. At the same time that it gives an entirely new appreciation of California's Central Valley, LifePlace shows how we can move toward a new way of being, thinking, and acting in the world that can lead to a sustainable, harmonious, and more satisfying future.
Titolo autorizzato: LifePlace  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 1-59734-714-0
9786612359606
1-282-35960-6
0-520-93680-9
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910811350203321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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Serie: BFI Modern Classics