
Loving God's Wildness
Jeffrey Bilbro
(Author)Description
Loving God's Wildness rediscovers the environmental roots of America's Puritan heritage. In tracing this history, Jeffrey Bilbro demonstrates how the dualistic Christianity that the Puritans brought to America led them to see the land as an empty wilderness that God would turn into a productive source of marketable commodities. Bilbro carefully explores the effect of this dichotomy in the nature writings of Henry David Thoreau, John Muir, Willa Cather, and Wendell Berry.
Thoreau, Muir, Cather, and Berry imaginatively developed the Puritan theological tradition to propose practical, physical means by which humans should live and worship within the natural temple of God's creation. They reshaped Puritan dualism, each according to the particular needs of his or her own ecological and cultural contexts, into a theology that demands care for the entire created community. While differing in their approaches and respective ecological ethics, the four authors Bilbro examines all share the conviction that God remains active in creation and that humans ought to relinquish their selfish ends to participate in his wild ecology.
Loving God's Wildness fills a critical gap in literary criticism and environmental studies by offering a sustained, detailed argument regarding how Christian theology has had a profound and enduring legacy in shaping the contours of the American ecological imagination. Literary critics, scholars of religion and environmental studies, and thoughtful Christians who are concerned about environmental issues will profit from this engaging new book.
Product Details
Publisher | University Alabama Press |
Publish Date | April 30, 2015 |
Pages | 240 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780817318574 |
Dimensions | 9.0 X 6.0 X 1.1 inches | 1.1 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
--Roger Lundin, author of From Nature to Experience: The American Search for Cultural Authority and editor of Invisible Conversations: Religion in the Literature of America
"Recommended."
--CHOICE
"With its revealing, ably researched focus on the subsurface 'Christian roots' of American nature writing, Jeffrey Bilbro's analysis of four noteworthy writers is a welcome contribution to the growing body of ecocritical literary commentary. Admirers of Wendell Berry will find Bilbro's account of that author's ecological vision in later writings, including the novel Jayber Crow, particularly illuminating."
--John Gatta, author of Making Nature Sacred: Literature, Religion, and Environment in America from the Puritans to the Present and American Madonna: Images of the Divine Woman in Literary Culture
"Running deep in the American religious psyche, according to Jeffrey Bilbro, is a kind of environmental schizophrenia, a profound ambivalence that has led us to protect and celebrate wilderness areas while simultaneously fueling the ambition to 'redeem' untamed nature by transforming it into a material sign of God's favor. Despite Lynn White's claim that only a religious solution to an essentially religious problem like American environmental degradation will serve us, religious ideas in contemporary environmental thought remain largely untreated or ignored by scholars. By demonstrating how some of our most important and innovative Christian environmental thinkers--Thoreau, Muir, Cather, and Berry--have navigated this ambivalence and managed to recover a Christian ethic of holistic and ecologically grounded protection of the environment, Bilbro's Loving God's Wildness provides American religious thought with an indispensable roadmap toward a more sane and clear-headed embrace of environmental stewardship."
--George Handley, author of Home Waters: A Year of Recompenses on the Provo River and coeditor of Postcolonial Ecologies: Literatures of the Environment
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