Driven Wild: How the Fight against Automobiles Launched the Modern Wilderness Movement

Driven Wild: How the Fight against Automobiles Launched the Modern Wilderness Movement

ISBN-10:
0295982209
ISBN-13:
9780295982205
Pub. Date:
01/01/2005
Publisher:
University of Washington Press
ISBN-10:
0295982209
ISBN-13:
9780295982205
Pub. Date:
01/01/2005
Publisher:
University of Washington Press
Driven Wild: How the Fight against Automobiles Launched the Modern Wilderness Movement

Driven Wild: How the Fight against Automobiles Launched the Modern Wilderness Movement

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Overview

In its infancy, the movement to protect wilderness areas in the United States was motivated less by perceived threats from industrial and agricultural activities than by concern over the impacts of automobile owners seeking recreational opportunities in wild areas. Countless commercial and government purveyors vigorously promoted the mystique of travel to breathtakingly scenic places, and roads and highways were built to facilitate such travel. By the early 1930s, New Deal public works programs brought these trends to a startling crescendo. The dilemma faced by stewards of the nation's public lands was how to protect the wild qualities of those places while accommodating, and often encouraging, automobile-based tourism. By 1935, the founders of the Wilderness Society had become convinced of the impossibility of doing both.

In Driven Wild, Paul Sutter traces the intellectual and cultural roots of the modern wilderness movement from about 1910 through the 1930s, with tightly drawn portraits of four Wilderness Society founders—Aldo Leopold, Robert Sterling Yard, Benton MacKaye, and Bob Marshall. Each man brought a different background and perspective to the advocacy for wilderness preservation, yet each was spurred by a fear of what growing numbers of automobiles, aggressive road building, and the meteoric increase in Americans turning to nature for their leisure would do to the country’s wild places. As Sutter discovered, the founders of the Wilderness Society were "driven wild"—pushed by a rapidly changing country to construct a new preservationist ideal.

Sutter demonstrates that the birth of the movement to protect wilderness areas reflected a growing belief among an important group of conservationists that the modern forces of capitalism, industrialism, urbanism, and mass consumer culture were gradually eroding not just the ecology of North America, but crucial American values as well. For them, wilderness stood for something deeply sacred that was in danger of being lost, so that the movement to protect it was about saving not just wild nature, but ourselves as well.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780295982205
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Publication date: 01/01/2005
Series: Weyerhaeuser Environmental Books
Pages: 383
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Paul S. Sutter is associate professor of history at the University of Georgia.

Table of Contents

Foreword: Why Worry about Roads, by William Cronon

Acknowledgments

The Problem with Wilderness

Knowing nature through Leisure: Outdoor Recreation during the Interwar Years

A Blank Spot on the Map: Aldo Leopold

Advertising the Wilde: Robert Sterling Yard

Wilderness as Regional Plan: Benton MacKaye

The Freedom of the Wilderness: Bob Marshall

Epilogue: A Living Wilderness

Notes

Sources

Index

What People are Saying About This

Donald Worster

"The preservation of wilderness is one of America’s greatest cultural achievements, and it is worth remembering how much complex thought has gone into making it happen. Paul Sutter restores to us a generation of activists who demand our respectful attention. They were subtle in their thinking, compassionate in their social sympathies, and critical in their response to consumer society. Well researched and skillfully written, this book will do much to elevate the contemporary debate over wilderness to higher ground."

Mark Harvey

"Driven Wild is an important and long-needed book capturing the social, cultural, and intellectual milieu at the dawn of the organized wilderness movement in the United States."

William Cronon

"Sutter’s most striking contribution in this book is to argue that the movement to protect wilderness had less to do with staving off threats posed by the rapacious activities of an industrial economy than with resisting the onslaught of automobile-owning consumers seeking recreational opportunities in rural and wild places."

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