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Charles T. Rubin - The Green Crusade: Rethinking the Roots of Environmentalism

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As recently as fifty years ago, the billowing industrial smokestack was a proud symbol of progress and power; today it is an image of unbridled corporate irresponsibility. This change in public attitudes reflects a shift in social values as rapid and profound as any in American history. Its effects are so far-reaching that scarcely anyone imagines there was ever an alternative view of the relationship between human beings and nature. Yet for all the time and energy devoted to discussion of environmentalism as a social and political movement, no one has questioned its existence as a coherent philosophy or given an account of how it first emerged in public consciousness. Most people would assume that the environmental idea, and the powerful political movement it inspired, must have emerged in response to self evident environmental problems such as air and water pollution, acid rain, the human destruction of natural habitats, and the resulting extinction of endangered species. But Charles T. Rubin argues that environmental problems are far from being a matter of common sense. He points out that while such situations almost certainly existed in the past, they were defined in different terms--implying different kinds of social and political solutions. Rubin tells the story of this massive yet strangely unnoticed transformation of public perception and social morality by focusing on the small group of influential writers and thinkers--Rachel Carson, Barry Commoner, Paul Ehrlich, E. F. Schumacher, and others -whose enormously popular writings gave birth to the environmental movement as we know it.

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title The Green Crusade Rethinking the Roots of Environmentalism - photo 1

title:The Green Crusade : Rethinking the Roots of Environmentalism
author:Rubin, Charles T.
publisher:Rowman & Littlefield
isbn10 | asin:0847688178
print isbn13:9780847688173
ebook isbn13:9780585114071
language:English
subjectGreen movement, Environmentalism.
publication date:1994
lcc:GE195.R83 1994eb
ddc:333.7/2
subject:Green movement, Environmentalism.
Page i
The Green Crusade
Rethinking the Roots of Environmentalism
Charles T. Rubin
ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS, INC.
Lanham Boulder New York Oxford
Page ii
ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS, INC.
Published in the United States of America
by Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
4720 Boston Way, Lanham, Maryland 20706
12 Hid's Copse Road
Cumnor Hill, Oxford OX2 9JJ, England
Copyright 1994 by Charles T. Rubin
First Rowman & Littlefield edition published in 1998.
Reprinted by permission of The Free Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Information Available
The Free Press edition of this book was previously catalogued by the Library of
Congress as follows:
Rubin, Charles T.
The green crusade : rethinking the roots of environmentalism / Charles T. Rubin.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Green movement. 2. Environmentalism. I. Title.
GE195.R83 1994 93-48858
333.7'2dc20 CIP
ISBN 0-8476-8817-8
Printed in the United States of America
Picture 2The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information SciencesPermanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.481984.
Page iii
TO LESLIE, AND TO OUR CHILDREN
with the hope that they will be able to make our mistakes
Page v
Contents
Acknowledgments
vii
Introduction: Green in Judgement
1
1. Brightest Heaven of Invention
29
2. We Happy Few
75
3. Small-Knowing Souls
129
4. The Mind O'erthrown
175
5. Something More Than Natural
213
Notes
253
Index
303

Page vii
Acknowledgments
A work whose genesis extends back as far as this one presents the danger of a list of acknowledgments of unseemly length, combined with the possibility that some important people will be overlooked. To avoid both errors, I would like to extend blanket thanks to teachers, colleagues, and friends whose help over the years is reflected in the pages that follow.
A more manageable number of people deserve recognition for the smaller, yet far more intense, task of bringing this book to precisely its present form. Adam Bellow, editor at the Free Press, worked patiently with me to do what I could not have done alonemake this an interesting book for his press and for a non-specialized audience. Research assistance was provided by Melanie Maurer and Kathy Toulson, both graduate students at Duquesne University's Graduate Center for Social and Public Policy. Ben Franklin's advice that you make a friend when you ask someone to do you a service was entirely vindicated by the generous willingness of Dr. Jeffrey Salmon, executive director of the George C. Marshall Institute, to comment on a draft of the book; it should be less heavy going for the reader as a result of his efforts. Dr. Thomas L. Short provided the same service and gave me the incisive criticism that I have long had the pleasure of relying on.
As they always do, my family came through in numerous ways. My brother, Bill, helped get the footnotes under control (assisted by his son, Eli), my sister, Betsy, picked at my arguments, and my parents, Alan and Audrie Rubin, lovingly supported me and at crucial moments took care of my children. My wife, Leslie, did all of these same things and combined them with the functions of editor,
Page viii
research assistant, cook, adviser: the list could go on but I will spare her modesty. There would be no book without her.
Over the years, the sinews for the research behind this book were provided by a number of foundations (critics, please note). Thanks to Dr. Robert H. Horwitz and Dr. Anthony Sullivan, the Earhart Foundation was willing to support me when I had little to show why they should. Dr. Philip N. Marcus and Dr. Kenneth M. Jensen at the Institute for Educational Affairs were equally willing to assist the work of a largely untested scholar. The John M. Olin Foundation provided help at a critical juncture, allowing me to keep an academic career alive; in this connection, I owe much to Dr. Christopher Bruell and Dr. Walter Berns. Finally, the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation allowed me to have the necessary time off to pull many years of effort together into this finished form. I hope this book, however belated, is fitting thanks to these farseeing institutions and individuals.
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