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- <text id=90TT3239>
- <title>
- Dec. 03, 1990: Literary Guides To Turning Green
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 03, 1990 The Lady Bows Out
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 104
- Literary Guides to Turning Green
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>To respect nature, people need a whole new way of thinking
- </p>
- <p>By EUGENE LINDEN
- </p>
- <p> The book business has discovered that green is truly the
- color of money: publishers are rushing to cash in on the current
- enthusiasm for environmentalism. Books in Print lists roughly
- 6,000 titles in 50 subject categories related to the
- environment, and the number grows by dozens each month. With so
- many choices, would-be environmentalists are understandably
- bewildered. Which books are worth reading, and which were thrown
- together merely to exploit a fad?
- </p>
- <p> Among the most popular titles are how-to guides like 50
- Simple Things You Can Do to Save the Earth (EarthWorks Press;
- $4.95). Such books are well intentioned and useful, but they
- may have the half-life of New Year's resolutions. The defeat of
- California's Big Green and other ecological initiatives in the
- recent election demonstrated that voters are still confused
- about the best way to deal with environmental concerns.
- </p>
- <p> One reason is that the movement is young, and the meaning of
- environmentalism is changing in subtle and profound ways. Not
- so long ago, "old thinking" had the environment tucked away in
- parks and rural areas, an amenity for the relatively affluent
- to appreciate on weekends. Implicit in this attitude was the
- idea that ecology was irrelevant to businessmen and policymakers
- concerned with the real issues of the day and that mankind could
- somehow get along without focusing on the environment.
- </p>
- <p> In recent years, however, such problems as ozone depletion
- and deforestation have shown that mankind is threatening the
- systems that support its economic and social well-being.
- Americans pay lip service to this reality but tend to revert to
- old thinking when environmental reform threatens either jobs or
- life-styles. People thus need to undergo a fundamental shift in
- perspective, acknowledging their dependence on a healthy
- biosphere. Seeing earth as a whole erases the illusion that
- humanity is separate from the natural order. For that reason
- alone, The Home Planet (Addison-Wesley; $19.95), an elegant
- compilation of photos taken during American and Soviet space
- missions, might be the first text in a syllabus for
- environmental re-education. In quotes accompanying the pictures,
- cosmonauts and astronauts from more than a dozen nations
- struggle to express the transcendental experience of seeing how
- life has invested our planet with a luminous beauty. Writes
- Soviet cosmonaut Alexei Leonov: "So touchingly alone, our home
- must be defended like a holy relic."
- </p>
- <p> The view from space also offers support for a scientific
- theory that is becoming the paradigm of the new
- environmentalism. First proposed by British inventor and chemist
- James Lovelock, this theory, called the Gaia hypothesis, argues
- that the earth functions as an organism and that life processes
- regulate the planet to maintain its habitability. According to
- Gaia, no single species, not even humanity, is necessary to the
- functioning of the biosphere.
- </p>
- <p> More than a dozen books explore aspects of the Gaia
- hypothesis. Lovelock's most recent thinking is available in The
- Ages of Gaia (Bantam Books; $10.95). The scientist has an
- attractively wry style, but his discussions of biochemistry and
- other abstruse fields can run ahead of general readers, who
- might prefer to turn to one of the more popular books about the
- theory. Among the most balanced and accessible is Lawrence
- Joseph's Gaia, the Growth of an Idea (St. Martin's Press;
- $19.95). Joseph goes to great lengths to characterize the
- importance of Gaia, but where necessary he holds Lovelock to
- account. Lovelock was the first scientist to propose that
- chemical aerosols called CFCs might pose a threat to the ozone
- layer, but his faith in the restorative powers of Gaia led him
- to downplay the danger.
- </p>
- <p> For those who would like to explore more deeply the context
- for Gaia and the new environmentalism, Bantam Books will soon
- publish The Rebirth of Nature: The Greening of Science and God
- ($21.95) by Rupert Sheldrake. The British biochemist and
- philosopher delves into classical thought and the Reformation to
- describe the events that led to the desecration of nature in
- Western science and religion, and then argues that a new animism
- is bridging the gap between science and religion.
- </p>
- <p> Popular writers as well as scientists have helped to shape
- new thinking about the natural order. Arctic Dreams, Barry
- Lopez's homage to the far North, is an exemplar of the search to
- resolve the tensions between human aspirations and natural
- harmony. In the cold half-light of the Arctic, the author finds
- an altar to bow before, a place where life, though a mere
- brushstroke on the frozen plains, still manages to give meaning
- and beauty to an otherwise bleak world.
- </p>
- <p> The literary skills of writers like Lopez notwithstanding,
- nature remains its own best salesperson. Nowhere is the
- exuberant genius of the biosphere more on display than in the
- world's rain forests, and photographs convey the riches of these
- regions as well as any text. Chronicle Books is currently
- bringing The Rainforests, A Celebration ($35) to the U.S. A
- coffee-table book first published in Britain, it combines
- stunning photographs with a series of essays written by some of
- the leading students of tropical nature. The book takes the
- reader through the forests, showcasing the resident creatures,
- their different strategies for survival and the mutual
- dependencies that tie these competing interests into an almost
- self-sustaining system. It is difficult to see the exquisite
- artfulness without wondering what other treasures are concealed
- in the forests--and gaining a sense of how much is lost when
- earth's habitats are destroyed.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-