Back to Nature: The Arcadian Myth in Urban AmericaJohns Hopkins University Press, 01.02.1990 - 264 Seiten Peter J. Schmitt describes the many ways in which America's urban middle class became involved with nature from the turn of the century to shortly after World War I, and he assess the influence of the "Arcadian myth" on American culture. With sympathy and gentle irony, he surveys the manifestations of the American love affair with the country: summer camps, the beginnings of wildlie protection and the conservation crusade, landscaped cemeteris, "Christian ornithology," and wilderness novels. The Arcadian drive reflected urban values, as the city-dweller sought virtue in nature. Landscape gardening, country clubs, national parks, and scenic turnoffs imposed the industrial ethic of order, neatness, and regularity on natural landscaps. Nature study and anthropomorphic animal stories taught moral values to children. |
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... Association Bulletin , Series II , No. 5 ( November , 1912 ) , p . 6 . 44. " Belle - Terre , " Country Life in America , IV ( September , 1903 ) , pp . 351-352 . Many residential colonies were similar to the " Heathcote Association ...
... Association , " American Park and Outdoor Art Association and American League for Civic Improvement , joint issue , Bulletin Number 1 ( n.p. , n.d. ) . 18. J. Horace McFarland , The Awakening of Harrisburg ( Harrisburg : n.p. , 1906 ) ...
... Association Press , 1931 ) , pp . xiii , 4 , 128 , 66 . 14. Carlos Ward , Organized Camping and Progressive Education ( Nashville : Cullom & Ghertner , 1935 ) , p . 39 . 15. Quoted in H. W. Gibson , Camp Management , a Manual on Organ ...
Inhalt
Back to Nature | 3 |
The Literary Commuter | 20 |
Birds in the Bush | 33 |
Urheberrecht | |
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