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Wilderness: A Place Apart
On Sept. 3, 1964, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Wilderness Act, a law whose purpose was to "establish a National Wilderness Preservation System for the permanent good of the whole people, and for other purposes." Years in the making, this law was intended to recognize not so much a place, but an idea.
This idea is by no means a new one, coming as a result of the industrialization and mechanization of the Western world in the 18th and 19th centuries. The act beautifully encompasses many features of the Romantic Movement permeating society in the mid-20th century in its emphasis on places "untrammeled by man" whose primary characteristic is "primeval" nature, where a "natural" world reigns.
In other words, wilderness is valuable because it is the place where humans are not. It is also valuable, as historian Michael Lewis reminds us, in its scope -- it dwarfs us geographically and conceptually.
And yet, Congress also chose to recognize the redeeming qualities of wilderness for humans, a place where we can go to find "solitude," a state most sought after in a world where culture seems to be everywhere.
There are now roughly 107 million acres of land designated as wilderness, up from the original 9.1 million set aside in 1964. Western states such as California, Alaska and Idaho have the most, while Connecticut, Rhode Island and four other states have no federally recognized wilderness areas as defined by the act.
I am sure that many of us would agree that the Wilderness Act of 1964 has been a boon to the nation, if not the world. But why do we value wilderness?
In 1964, we were arguably a nation becoming ill at ease with our postwar economic expansion, the growth of our suburbs, our population explosion -- our inability to escape each other. We were beginning to ask then, as we still ask now, how best to care for what we as a country thought we had a surfeit: land.
Nowhere was our attempt to understand our relationship to the land demonstrated as aptly as it was in 1962 when Rachel Carson published "Silent Spring," which inaugurated the modern environmental movement. Among Carson's insights, she noted that we were not only poisoning ourselves with herbicides and insecticides, we were also being poisoned by those with good intentions.
Carson's lasting legacy was her demonstration -- still relevant today -- that even in the United States we often have little control over our communities; that state, local and federal agencies -- peopled by experts trained at our universities, often at public expense -- often determine the fate of human and ecological health.
Thus, as Congress considered the Wilderness Act, Carson was documenting our treatment of the Earth far closer to home. This paradox is important.
The Romantic sentiment prevailed. Thanks to the federal government, there would always be a mountain or a lake or a vista where we could not screw things up, where we might be assured of finding God, or ourselves, or some charismatic fauna. The effects of our thoughtlessness and rapine elsewhere would be mitigated by our non-presence in this magnificent wilderness.
But as environmental historians remind us, that pristine place has always been difficult to find. And this is why wilderness is so profoundly important as an idea, because it reflects our own changing attitudes about nature; what it is for, and what it means.
For instance, we no longer recognize the "hideous and desolate wilderness" that William Bradford noted as he decamped the Mayflower. Nor, however, is wilderness the romantic salve for industrial capitalism. To go into the wilderness today is unhappily to meet with any number of examples of culture: the planes overhead, the SUVs driven by Sierra Club members, the fast-food chains ringing its edges.
Perhaps we need to start seeing wilderness differently, more holistically, as a part of our urban and suburban worlds. It makes me ask, along with environmental historian William Cronon, whether our drive to preserve wilderness areas has had one very detrimental effect: allowing us to despoil those places where we live, where our daily choices are most keenly felt.
William Major is an associate professor of English at the University of Hartford.
Copyright © 2008, The Hartford Courant



18 Comments so far
Show AllHumans are naturally a part of nature. http://allinharmony.org
Until we can grasp the truth of this, we will position ourselves 'outside' of Nature by 'redefining it' (killing it) and ourselves.
We have a number of ways to do this but the principle one is nature estrangement by inappropriate diet. Humans are herbivores.
And along with this 'nature estrangement program' centering on redefining humans as omnivore/carnivores instead of natural herbivores, we have also invented such nonsenses as 'top of the food chain' and 'bigger brains', etc.
Nature is the crucible of all development (including intellectual, emotional and social) for all creatures. Without recourse to its council... we have embarked upon a course of violating it and ultimately became its antithesis...
Nature is a lively and life-engendering process. It functions by certain inviolable laws of interaction and cooperation.
Modern human culture, as its antithesis, and its catastrophic obstruction… is the process of introducing total chaos to this natural system… by fist disconnecting human beings from that process and acting to arrest its functioning…
…which when completed will have interfered with all natural processes and removed the vitality of the once (and hopefully future) biosphere.
I dont know if humans are naturally herbivores(or omnivores)
but if meat eating by humans is ok then so is war, rape, theft, slavery, you name it.
Meat eating by humans is a sin. Its a sin against Nature, a sin against other species and a sin against our own.
All the arguments to suggest otherwise are erroneous.
Its just excuses. All debunked here:
http://animalvegfaq.tripod.com
Wilderness is the life-blood of the planet.
As this era of resource control and devastation advances, the value of the watershed most wilderness provides will be invaluable for all Americans, even those who have no interest or ability to use wilderness for recreation.
Everybody needs clean water.
As someone who chose to retire in a semi-wilderness environment (actually a very tiny rural community surrounded by small farms and large unforested areas) I can tell the world that nothing matches the simple pleasure of just sitting on the shore of an unspoiled lake and watching the sunrise. Well, being able to look out my back door and watch deer grazing in the field behind the house may come close. And there's nothing like the secure feeling provided by water from your own well and vegetables from your own garden.
I wouldn't return to the regimented existence of a city dweller for all of its supposed 'amenities', although I must admit that these damn slow satellite connections to the outside world are irksome at times. :^)
"I dont know if humans are naturally herbivores(or omnivores)"
kelmer,
I hope the following helps:
"If you look at various characteristics of carnivores (meat eaters) versus herbivores (non-meat eaters), it doesn't take a genius to see where humans compare"
(Quote from William C. Roberts, Editor in chief of The American Journal of Cardiology and medical director of the Baylor Heart and Vascular Institute at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas)
___________
From "The Comparative Anatomy of Eating", by Milton R. Mills, MD
Facial Muscles
CARNIVORE: Reduced to allow wide mouth gape
HERBIVORE: Well-developed
OMNIVORE: Reduced
HUMAN: Well-developed
Jaw Type
CARNIVORE: Angle not expanded
HERBIVORE: Expanded angle
OMNIVORE: Angle not expanded
HUMAN: Expanded angle
Jaw Joint Location
CARNIVORE: On same plane as molar teeth
HERBIVORE: Above the plane of the molars
OMNIVORE: On same plane as molar teeth
HUMAN: Above the plane of the molars
Jaw Motion
CARNIVORE: Shearing; minimal side-to-side motion
HERBIVORE: No shear; good side-to-side, front-to-back
OMNIVORE: Shearing; minimal side-to-side
HUMAN: No shear; good side-to-side, front-to-back
Major Jaw Muscles
CARNIVORE: Temporalis
HERBIVORE: Masseter and pterygoids
OMNIVORE: Temporalis
HUMAN: Masseter and pterygoids
Mouth Opening vs. Head Size
CARNIVORE: Large
HERBIVORE: Small
OMNIVORE: Large
HUMAN: Small
Teeth: Incisors
CARNIVORE: Short and pointed
HERBIVORE: Broad, flattened and spade shaped
OMNIVORE: Short and pointed
HUMAN: Broad, flattened and spade shaped
Teeth: Canines
CARNIVORE: Long, sharp and curved
HERBIVORE: Dull and short or long (for defense), or none
OMNIVORE: Long, sharp and curved
HUMAN: Short and blunted
Teeth: Molars
CARNIVORE: Sharp, jagged and blade shaped
HERBIVORE: Flattened with cusps vs complex surface
OMNIVORE: Sharp blades and/or flattened
HUMAN: Flattened with nodular cusps
Chewing
CARNIVORE: None; swallows food whole
HERBIVORE: Extensive chewing necessary
OMNIVORE: Swallows food whole and/or simple crushing
HUMAN: Extensive chewing necessary
Saliva
CARNIVORE: No digestive enzymes
HERBIVORE: Carbohydrate digesting enzymes
OMNIVORE: No digestive enzymes
HUMAN: Carbohydrate digesting enzymes
Stomach Type
CARNIVORE: Simple
HERBIVORE: Simple or multiple chambers
OMNIVORE: Simple
HUMAN: Simple
Stomach Acidity
CARNIVORE: Less than or equal to pH 1 with food in stomach
HERBIVORE: pH 4 to 5 with food in stomach
OMNIVORE: Less than or equal to pH 1 with food in stomach
HUMAN: pH 4 to 5 with food in stomach
Stomach Capacity
CARNIVORE: 60% to 70% of total volume of digestive tract
HERBIVORE: Less than 30% of total volume of digestive tract
OMNIVORE: 60% to 70% of total volume of digestive tract
HUMAN: 21% to 27% of total volume of digestive tract
Length of Small Intestine
CARNIVORE: 3 to 6 times body length
HERBIVORE: 10 to more than 12 times body length
OMNIVORE: 4 to 6 times body length
HUMAN: 10 to 11 times body length
Colon
CARNIVORE: Simple, short and smooth
HERBIVORE: Long, complex; may be sacculated
OMNIVORE: Simple, short and smooth
HUMAN: Long, sacculated
Liver
CARNIVORE: Can detoxify vitamin A
HERBIVORE: Cannot detoxify vitamin A
OMNIVORE: Can detoxify vitamin A
HUMAN: Cannot detoxify vitamin A
Kidney
CARNIVORE: Extremely concentrated urine
HERBIVORE: Moderately concentrated urine
OMNIVORE: Extremely concentrated urine
HUMAN: Moderately concentrated urine
Nails
CARNIVORE: Sharp claws
HERBIVORE: Flattened nails or blunt hooves
OMNIVORE: Sharp claws
HUMAN: Flattened nails
I like the lines from "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner"
He prayeth best who loveth best
All things both great and small
For the dear God who loveth us
He made and loveth all.
We know the price of everything, but the value of nothing. We think in short-term sound bite economics. The value of wilderness is not even on our radar. How can it be when we are still busily maiming and murdering innocent members of our own species?
I entirely agree with you Mr. Major. On every aspect of your article. However, the trend I've seen in my lifetime suggests that wilderness will not be fully appreciated until the few humans left on this planet are hunting and gathering again for their survival.
Holy crap, how do we get from an article about wilderness to the same old comparative anatomy tripe about how humans who aren't vegans are morally backward? Well, I suppose if no one listens in the threads related to food, then why not try folks who read other articles?
Anyhow, I'm happy that Major pointed out the impact of restricting wilderness preservation ethics to large chunks of land not encountered daily by most people. That's an important step for the deeply disconnected to take - reclaiming a connection to the natural world where we actually spend most of our time. If we all work to protect and restore our local wildlands and natural areas, there's a lot of community building and problem solving to be had in the process!
I think that is a very arbitrary correlation. Preserving wilderness means trashing everything else? If you really respect the web of life in which we all live (psst! humans are part of the natural world, too) you respect a healthy environment whether it is occupied by humans or not. Of course, we need places that are free of human habitation, especially since human habitation usually comes with a lot of destruction practices. Humans can go into wilderness areas - to visit - with respect.
I expressed my take on this in an essay, "Getting It Right," in my blog at http://goodwordswan.wildflowerstew.ccom
"Holy crap, how do we get from an article about wilderness to the same old comparative anatomy tripe about how humans who aren't vegans are morally backward?"
The point, apparently missed, is that to preserve Nature, one must enter it upon Its terms. That of course leads to a discussion of what those terms are.
In the case of humans, it means respecting our herbivore design and acting in accord with it.
Nature is NOT something 'out there'. It is in fact, all of us together.
That we have chosen to violate Its laws does us and the rest of nature a total disservice... so much so that it has imperiled ALL wildness and that will ultimately mean all life.
If you really care about nature, respect what it has to say about your own place within it and acceptable behavior there.
goodwordswan,
The link to your site gives an error. Can you check the link?
Congress also included a great big cowpie of a "poison pill" in the Wilderness Act by allowing grazing of domestic livestock to continue on every "suitable" wilderness acre.
oops sorry - I stuttered it's http://goodwordswan.wildflowerstew.com
You have just cleaned up the barn, "it's spotless now" you may think. But within minutes of walking out the door, the spiders will return, the ants will return, insects too numerous to count start their nests or cocoons. The rodents just chuckled at you from underground. Within days the vines are reaching the wood fibers ready to start their ascent, vines that provide shade and allow moisture to remain in the wood fibers nourishing termites, carpenter ants, which breakdown those fibers and start to ruin the structural support. If unattended by humans the barn becomes a wilderness of it's own within months, a home to swallows, hornets, bats, ground squirrels, rabbits, mice, snakes, shade weeds, and prowling bobcats hiding in a mass of tangled vines.
A massive concrete fortress of a city is just as vulnerable to the return of the wilderness beings. They just wait and laugh at their crazy human cousins attempting to destroy them, waiting for the day the humans may destroy themselves, with their "holier than thou" attitude.
rebelnow,
I really wish that were so. But, the barren hills of California tell another story. The deserts of the Middle East, tell another story. The deserts of Argentina where vast alluvial plains once existed, tell another story... the vanishing species... the soils turning from rich loamy browns to lifeless color...
Everywhere, what once was vibrant has become increasingly deadened... and we can't even agree that what is left is worth saving or that the programs (and lifestyles) that could save it are worth embracing.
We are a part of nature… it is just ourselves extended so to speak… so we are dying, more and more each day.
Suburban micro environments on our own land and yards plays an important role in sustaining life. Gardening for ourselves and the animals and insects helps sustainability. Supplemental feeding in times of need and stress also sustains animal life. Providing a small water source helps all things.
Cultivating indigenous plants enhances the environment and helps to sustain the bees. Avoiding poisoning the soil with herbicides and insecticides enhances life. Allowing your lawn or yard to be what it chooses to be is important for all life.
Respecting the lowly mole and allow them to do their job is important. Web worms are a welcome summer participant. Accepting these things as natural wonders is essential to a healthy human environment. Allow natural life to be what it chooses to be and enjoy the experience. It costs less, is no work, and provides an enlightened learning experience. Animals too are social creatures and will congregate in your little micro environment if you allow them to. Fit in and be a part of it. Sit outdoors in a comfortable place and you will see things that you have never before seen and your spirit will be renewed.
Doom n Gloom,
That is a really nice post and every word of it is wise and true.