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| The Earth's Blanket: Traditional Teachings for Sustainable Living (Culture, Place, and Nature) | 
| Author: Nancy J. Turner Publisher: University of Washington Press Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $5.87 You Save: $19.08 (76%)
New (23) from $5.87
Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 970851
Media: Paperback Edition: Reprint Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 298 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 5.9 x 0.9
ISBN: 0295987391 Dewey Decimal Number: 305 EAN: 9780295987392 ASIN: 0295987391
Publication Date: February 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: NEW and UNREAD book with NO remainder marks. 2005 Canadian Published Edition. In stock now for immediate packaging and shipment
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| Customer Reviews:
When syrup meets fluff April 1, 2008 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
Turner's book undoubtedly has all the best intentions in the world behind it. I have little or no doubt that her respect for the Native culture she covers knows no bounds...but, unfortunately, that's part of the problem. This book is a very uncritical treatment of one coastal tribe, used then as a possible pattern for "sustainable living." Since the book has these great aspirations, she has the responsibility to undertake critical analysis, to show us WHY this particular people should be some sort of pattern or blueprint for the future. The book fails to do that.
I had hoped to use this text as a resource for a class in environmental ethics--it is unusable in that context. The author has so identified with the target people that she turns a blind eye to very obvious problems with various native practices. For example, if these "traditional practices" are so winsome and attractive, why is it that so few Natives themselves employ them? Why is it that most tribes and peoples have, in fact, swung the other way into large capitalistic ventures or have completely adopted casinos as THE paradigm for tribal success? I certainly don't begrudge tribes from making money by engaging in the capitalistic free market of gambling (no one is forcing whites to throw their money away!), but let's not fool ourselves into thinking that these "traditional teachings" are anything but romantic remnants of peoples long since gone. Turner not only turns a blind eye to this problem but she reserves all her critical acumen for the dominant white culture.
For example, on page 43, Turner actually makes the comment that "it is difficult for those of us from western, urbanized society to really understand the concept of a mountain being sacred or to feel what that means." This statement shows a remarkable ignorance of both the literature on geographical sacrality or even common sense. Talk to loggers about the mountains; talk to fishermen about rivers; listen to what baby boomers say about vacation spots they visited in their youths; the language you hear and the concepts they express are remarkably similar to that expressed by "traditionalist" peoples. Places are sacred to all of us. ALL humans are, by nature, responders and story-tellers of sacrality. Just because the narratives are not fashioned with chipmunks or coyotes as the heroes does not mean that those of us who dwell in "westernized" society have any difficulty associating places with sacredness. How many of us remember where we proposed to our spouses? Where loved ones died? Why all those crosses alongside the roads that mark the tragic deaths of loved ones? All these come from the very HUMAN desire to take hold of the sacred.
Turner also becomes annoying in her constant odes to everything Native, in each and every instance fawning over Native stories. She has no problems labeling a rather simple story of origins "spellbinding," even though it resembles similar stories from various fairy tales and myths from many traditions (p. 45, and see pp. 47ff as well).
So, if this book is more novella than objective treatise, then why does she constantly inject nearly unprounceable native words into stories? In stories about plants or animals she constantly uses the Latin names after the common name; and when talking about Native peoples, she used phoenetic Native spelling after the common. Whether it is the western habit of objectification (using the very western Latin scientific names) or the (eastern?) habit of interjecting "traditional" spellings of peoples, animals, and places, the end result is the same: rendering the book nearly unreadable at times, even at the basic, novella-type level. Thus, the book fails at both the academic and the laypeople genre.
Part of the problem seems to stem from some notion of liberal guilt (see Eugene Hunn's fawning treatment of the Yakamas), in which wealthy, academic elites take turns taking pot shots at the very culture that made them a success and then romantically create their own versions of the "white man's Indian." They can't have it both ways. If traditionalistic teaching are so valid, so required for today's society, then by all means, quit your tenured professorships, move off the grid, and "walk the talk." But writing books that tout "traditionalist teachings" that use paper and inks that come from the destruction of native plants; and from those who are resplendent in living off the fat of the "nasty, urbanized west" seems more than hypocritical; it is ludicrous. Earth's Blanket started off with the best of intentions, but it simply tried to do too much, to cover two distinct genres; in attempting this, it fails at both.
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Wildlife, nature and the Environment
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