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| The Sunflower Forest: Ecological Restoration and the New Communion with Nature | 
| Author: William R. Jordan Iii Publisher: University of California Press Category: Book
List Price: $29.95 Buy New: $5.92 You Save: $24.03 (80%)
New (15) from $5.92
Avg. Customer Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 533070
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 264 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 5.9 x 1
ISBN: 0520233204 Dewey Decimal Number: 333.95153 EAN: 9780520233201 ASIN: 0520233204
Publication Date: June 1, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Ecological restoration, the attempt to guide damaged ecosystems back to a previous, usually healthier or more natural, condition, is rapidly gaining recognition as one of the most promising approaches to conservation. In this book, William R. Jordan III, who coined the term "restoration ecology," and who is widely respected as an intellectual leader in the field, outlines a vision for a restoration-based environmentalism that has emerged from his work over twenty-five years. Drawing on a provocative range of thinkers, from anthropologists Victor Turner, Roy Rappaport, and Mary Douglas to literary critics Frederick Turner, Leo Marx, and R.W.B. Lewis, Jordan explores the promise of restoration, both as a way of reversing environmental damage and as a context for negotiating our relationship with nature. Exploring restoration not only as a technology but also as an experience and a performing art, Jordan claims that it is the indispensable key to conservation. At the same time, he argues, restoration is valuable because it provides a context for confronting the most troubling aspects of our relationship with nature. For this reason, it offers a way past the essentially sentimental idea of nature that environmental thinkers have taken for granted since the time of Emerson and Muir.
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| Customer Reviews:
Way more than eco-philosophy August 25, 2006 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
Bill Jordan says restoration is the only approach to ecological stewardship that will last in the long run, which is the only run that counts. Restoration assumes a heavy human hand, exactly something that rubs the nature-as-sacred camp the wrong way. Jordan proposes a metaphor for guiding ecology: community. One reason both "liberal" and "conservative" politicians and activists scorn restoration ecology is because we hate community. We like having friends, but true community is very costly, an observation in line with scripture. True community goes against sinful nature, and requires society's full efforts to avoid disintegration.
Jordan lists four stages of a human's community involvement in life. These four struck me as very important for understanding life, but less important for building ecological principles:
1. I am not God. (Some people never figure this out) 2. Get a Job. (We all need to contribute to the world) 3. Giving Gifts. (Giving connects others to us) 4. Receiving Gifts. (Receiving connects us to others)
This one surprised me. How is receiving a greater communal than giving? It's a simple answer that is changing my life: receiving a gift binds us to someone else, while giving a gift only binds others to us. As long as we only give and never receive, no one has any claim on us and we retain absolute control over the relationship.
The Sunflower Forest is a science book that taught me more about community than many books ostensibly about community. It's also an insightful, if a little "out there" treatise on restoration ecology. The lessons are profound, but the policy recommendations - a debate within a narrow field of eco-philosophers - will date very quickly.
The Sunflower Forest July 8, 2003 8 out of 9 found this review helpful
Ecological restoration has often been viewed as either a fringe hobby -- a few aficionados re-creating a patch of prairie on weekends -- or as a distraction from the vital and politically charged work of preserving more or less undisturbed landscapes. But William R. Jordan III argues that it's vital to the preservation of the Earth's ecosystems, and to ourselves. Jordan, founder of the journal Ecological Restoration, writes that restoration is "a way of achieving an ecologically close relationship with the rest of nature," as well as "a context for confronting the most troubling aspects of our relationship with our fellow creatures." The Sunflower Forest is an important book about a practice that is, in coming years, bound to become one of the most important ways we deal with our surroundings. Thanks to Jordan's wide-ranging intellect and compelling writing, it's also a great pleasure to read.
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Wildlife, nature and the Environment
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