2019/09/04

Becoming Native to This Place by Wes Jackson | Goodreads



Becoming Native to This Place by Wes Jackson | Goodreads




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Becoming Native to This Place

by
Wes Jackson
4.09 · Rating details · 170 ratings · 14 reviews
In six compelling essays, Wes Jackson lays the foundation for a new farming economy grounded in nature’s principles. Exploding the tenets of industrial agriculture, Jackson, a respected advocate for sustainable practices and the founder of The Land Institute, seeks to integrate food production with nature in a way that sustains both.

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Paperback, 136 pages
Published October 1st 1996 by Counterpoint (first published November 30th 1992)
Original Title
Becoming Native to This Place
ISBN
1887178112 (ISBN13: 9781887178112)
Edition Language
English

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Jan 21, 2008Zoe Hallez Williams rated it did not like it
Recommends it for: NOONE
This book is so white privileged and ignorant. Wes Jackson acts as though agricultural technique can erase the impact of centuries of Western Civilization. He poses the idea that a white farmer was treated as badly as a native person by colonialism. I wish I could reclaim the five hours of my life that I spent reading this.
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Jan 25, 2016Amy rated it really liked it · review of another edition
To a large extent, this book is a challenge to the universities to stop and think what they are doing with the young men and women they are supposed to be preparing for the future. The universities now offer only one serious major; upward mobility. Little attention is paid to educating the young to return home, or to go some other place, and dig in. There is no such thing as a "homecoming" major. [p.3]
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Oct 04, 2012Aaron rated it liked it · review of another edition
Recommends it for: geographers, ecologists
Mr. Jackson certainly makes some interesting arguments, ones with which I concur a great deal. However, the book itself is written at a high level and is, therefore, going to be unavailable to certain people. I know that sounds elitist, but a big part of the problem with environmental writing is that it's not written on a level that most people understand. And, when that happens, they're free to ignore it. We need writing that reaches the core of people.

To that end, Jackson advises us to foster community in the hopes of creating an ecological view of the world that enables us to survive our own bad choices from previous generations. He does, on occasion, make arguments that I don't necessarily buy into, but on the whole I find his premise to be a good one. Unfortunately, the educational level needed to read Jackson's book leaves it out of the grasp of many people...possibly the very people who could make his ideas reality. (less)
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Feb 21, 2009Josh rated it liked it
wait until you are ready
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May 04, 2017Jeff Jones rated it it was amazing
Slim but foundational.
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Jul 30, 2018Walt rated it really liked it
Wes Jackson here provides a set of very important questions for modern society. What happened to our connection with the land and with each other? Why do we continue to follow our current economic and political models if we know they fail to make us happy? What does it mean for a way of life to be sustainable? He does not quite arrive at an answer, but does emerge with what seems to be a way towards an answer, which is the formation of communities based on shared sense of place. Since this was written, we have not made a great deal of progress, but there is still time.(less)
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Jul 06, 2019Callie rated it liked it
A philosophical ballast for the scientific work the Land Institute conducts. Wes continuously (and rightfully) pays homage to Wendell Berry. Read him first. Or, seek out Land Institute research.
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Oct 08, 2014Maryanne added it
Becoming Native to This Place 05312014 by Wes Jackson
Interesting: Community!!!

Alternative perspective on human interaction with the earth
By Gregory J Guenther on June 19, 2000
Format: Paperback
Very easy reading, short book.
Wes Jackson describes a growing perspective that we need to interact symbiotically with the earth rather than considering the earth a "resource" at our disposal. He mixes philosophy with actual personal experiences to further illustrate the story.
The fact that he began the Land Use Institute in Kansas and is still and active participant lends credibility to his dialog.
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10 of 14 people found the following review helpful
Doesn't live up to the title.
By Settler on August 10, 2009
Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
Wes Jackson is writing with the huge disadvantage of a great title, and I have to say I value all the thought and meditation the title provokes more than the content of the book, which starts with some promise but then wanders off into the woods. He tells you early on that he's going to get lost in the woods when he says that we need to have our "evolutionary/ecological worldview inform our decisions."

Part of the problem is that the title is hopeful, but the book reads like more of a wandering lament or critique of our situation for which the author ultimately has no compelling answers.

That said, the first chapters do provide some useful information on the history of agriculture in the US and the Soviet Union. Particularly interesting is his view that the failure of Soviet agriculture (because much of it was based upon Communist ideology, including ideas about plant heredity) produced in the West the contrary view that philosophy should have no bearing whatsoever on agriculture. Jackson does want philosophy and moral reflection to influence our thinking about agriculture, but he still leaves us ungrounded in any worldview that can provide moral compulsion for care of the earth.

Skip this book in favor of any of the following:

Living at Nature's Pace, Farming and the American Dream, by Gene Logsdon
The Unsettling of America: Culture and Agriculture, by Wendell Berry
The Omnivore's Dilemma, A Natural History of Four Meals, by Michael Pollan
1 Comment Was this review helpful to you? Yes No
Good book!
By Victoria Kantargis on August 21, 2013
Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
it's very interesting. thought provoking...most books are but this one is really good. theres history, genetics, culture, etc. very good.
(less)
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Aug 23, 2014James rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Coronado murdered a native slave in 1542. He had led Coronado's men on a wild goose chase for gold in hopes that they would return him to his homeland.

And so there is a conflict between our greed, our trust in technology and our entering into place. This is a challenging and thought-provoking essay.
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Apr 18, 2009Lisa rated it really liked it
Shelves: agriculture-and-environment, non-fiction
There was a lot to reflect on in this book, though I think I would need to read it at least once more before seeing how all of the pieces fit together. It's difficult to see exactly what Jackson means by 'becoming native to this place' and how we are to carry it out. That's worth talking about, though.
The writing itself is at times slow-going and at times riveting.

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Facing the Anthropocene: Fossil Capitalism and the Crisis of the Earth System: Ian Angus: 9781583676097: Amazon.com: Books



Facing the Anthropocene: Fossil Capitalism and the Crisis of the Earth System: Ian Angus: 9781583676097: Amazon.com: Books







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"A crisp, eloquent and deeply informed call to arms by a leading eco-socialist." -author of Planet of Slums and In Praise of Barbarians: Essays against Empire,Mike Davis
About the Author




Ian Angus is editor of the online ecosocialist journal Climate and Capitalism. He is also the author of Facing the Anthropocene.




Product details

Paperback: 280 pages
Publisher: Monthly Review Press; Reprint edition (July 1, 2016)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 9781583676097
ISBN-13: 978-1583676097
ASIN: 1583676090
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 0.6 x 8.3 inches
Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars 7 customer reviews
Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #122,921 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
#243 in Economic Policy
#179 in Environmental Policy
#220 in Communism & Socialism (Books)


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Biography
IAN ANGUS is a socialist educator, historian and activist based in Canada. He speaks frequently at conferences on socialist and ecological issues, and his articles have been published in journals and newspapers around the world.

His most recent book is FACING THE ANTHROPOCENE: DIGITAL CAPITALISM AND THE CRISIS OF THE EARTH SYSTEM, which noted ecosocialist Michaey Lowy describes as "an outstanding contribution, not only for understanding the nature of the Anthropocene and its deadly consequences for human life, but also for explaining its social and economic causes."

In TOO MANY PEOPLE? POPULATION, IMMIGRATION, AND THE ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS, co-written with Simon Butler, he provided .a clear, well-documented, and popularly written refutation of the idea that “overpopulation” is a major cause of environmental destruction, arguing that a focus on human numbers not only misunderstands the causes of the crisis, it dangerously weakens the movement for real solutions.

His book CANADIAN BOLSHEVIKS: THE EARLY YEARS OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF CANADA, has been described by academic reviewers as "an underground classic among historians of the Canadian left" and "required reading for anyone seriously interested in the history of communism in Canada." A second edition was published in 2004.

Ian Angus is Editor of Climate and Capitalism, an online journal focusing on capitalism, climate change, and the ecosocialist alternative which has attracted writers and readers from every continent. http://.climateandcapitalism.com

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AutonomeusTop Contributor: Classic Rock

5.0 out of 5 starsCrucially important book on climate change and the ecological crisisJanuary 3, 2017
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
This short (232-page), accessible book makes a unique contribution among all the books now written on climate change and the ecological crisis. Ian Angus summarizes for a popular audience the developments leading to the designation of our time by leading earth scientists as the "Anthropocene," a new geological epoch shaped by the destructive actions of human society.

Paul Crutzen, the atmospheric chemist who won a Nobel Prize for his work identifying the hole in the ozone layer and its cause, coined the term "Anthropocene" in 2000, and it rapidly spread. It has now been recommended to the International Geological Congress and is pending official adoption.

The work leading to this new scientific periodization was carried out by earth scientists in the IGBP (the International Geosphere-Biosphere Program), formed in 1986 by the International Council of Scientific Unions, and published in 2004 as Global Change and the Earth System, edited by Steffen et al, published by Springer.

The first section of the book, "A No-Analog State," summarizes the earth science in a concise and gripping fashion, making clear that the placid, stable period of the Holocene, which made the growth of the human population and the rise of human "civilization" possible, has now come to an end. There will be no new Ice Age -- the massive CO2 emissions since WWII make that impossible. There will be only global warming and potentially catastrophic climate change unless we reverse course.

The final piece of the analysis of the "Anthropocene" is to date its beginning. Some have argued for an early date corresponding to the start of capitalism, but Angus conveys the earth scientists' conclusion that it was in fact the "Great Acceleration" after World War Two that clearly marks the beginning of the Anthropocene.

The second section of the book, "Fossil Capitalism," documents the Great Acceleration in the U.S. and then elsewhere, the development of an automobile-centered, fossil fuel-driven capitalist society, and a massive, oil-driven military used to assert control of the globe.

The last section of the book, "The Alternative," is inevitably the weakest. Angus argues for ecosocialism, but of course no one knows exactly what that is or how to create it starting from our current doomed society. Angus, along with John Bellamy Foster of Monthly Review Press, advocates a Marxism with an ecological component that was overlooked by most Marxists until recently and that would avoid the ecological disaster of the Soviet Union.

Clearly, based on the alarming conclusions of earth science, radical change is urgently required, and we need to act against the Fossil Fuel Industry and "fossil capitalism" while we debate the contours of the new ecological society!

14 people found this helpful

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Newsrocket

5.0 out of 5 starsOne of the many fire bells on the subject of climate change...September 10, 2016
Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase
Ought to be required reading for every high school junior in the country before they get slammed by last-century thinking on the street.

7 people found this helpful

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Steve in Long Beach

5.0 out of 5 starsInsightful bookMay 20, 2019
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Very worthwhile read. Lots of important information presented in an engaging way.

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Jason

5.0 out of 5 starsCandid and on the nose. Required reading to understand what's coming.September 2, 2018
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Highly recommend this book.


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Bill G

5.0 out of 5 starsUseful bookNovember 20, 2017
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Pretty gritty book - plain spoken and scientific. Gives you the basics but also has more dense material. Incorporates a Marxist analysis of the capitalist system as it has become.

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Stephen J. Shlafer

5.0 out of 5 starsFive StarsAugust 20, 2017
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Excellent

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Amazon Customer

5.0 out of 5 starsExcellent critical analysis of the most important we face as a speciesOctober 3, 2016
Format: Paperback
One of the most significant strengths of this book is the way in which it brings together an enormous diversity of insights into a comprehensive synthesis of the Anthropocene. The analysis traverses not only the basic science of climate change and other planetary boundaries such as ocean acidification, the nitrogen cycle, and biodiversity decline, but links this fundamentally to the history of ‘fossil capitalism’ and the complex political economy which enabled the Great Acceleration of post-Second World War economic growth. There is much to learn in reading this book! Essential reading for all those concerned about the climate crisis and what we need to do to limit catastrophe. (You can read my full review of this book here: [...])

7 people found this helpful

-----------------

Facing the Anthropocene: Fossil Capitalism and the Crisis of the Earth System

Ian Angus


Science tells us that a new and dangerous stage in planetary evolution has begun—the Anthropocene, a time of rising temperatures, extreme weather, rising oceans, and mass species extinctions. Humanity faces not just more pollution or warmer weather, but a crisis of the Earth System. If business as usual continues, this century will be marked by rapid deterioration of our physical, social, and economic environment. 

Large parts of Earth will become uninhabitable, and civilization itself will be threatened. Facing the Anthropocene shows what has caused this planetary emergency, and what we must do to meet the challenge. Bridging the gap between Earth System science and ecological Marxism, Ian Angus examines not only the latest scientific findings about the physical causes and consequences of the Anthropocene transition, but also the social and economic trends that underlie the crisis. 

Cogent and compellingly written, Facing the Anthropocene offers a unique synthesis of natural and social science that illustrates how capitalism's inexorable drive for growth, powered by the rapid burning of fossil fuels that took millions of years to form, has driven our world to the brink of disaster. Survival in the Anthropocene, Angus argues, requires radical social change, replacing fossil capitalism with a new, ecosocialist civilization.

$8.55 (USD)
Publisher: Monthly Review Press
Release date: 2016
Format: EPUB
Size: 1.44 MB
Language: English
Pages: 280

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The Unsettling of America: Culture & Agriculture: Wendell Berry: 9781619025998: Amazon.com: Books



The Unsettling of America: Culture & Agriculture: Wendell Berry: 9781619025998: Amazon.com: Books





Since its publication in 1977, The Unsettling of America has been recognized as a classic of American letters. In it, Wendell Berry argues that good farming is a cultural and spiritual discipline. Today’s agribusiness, however, takes farming out of its cultural context and away from families. As a result, we as a nation are more estranged from the land―from the intimate knowledge, love, and care of it.
Sadly, his arguments and observations are more relevant than ever. Although “this book has not had the happy fate of being proved wrong,” Berry writes, there are people working “to make something comely and enduring of our life on this earth.” Wendell Berry is one of those people, writing and working, as ever, with passion, eloquence, and conviction.


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The Unsettling of America: Culture & Agriculture Paperback – September 15, 2015
by Wendell Berry (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars 32 customer reviews


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About the Author



Wendell Berry is the author of more than fifty books of poetry, fiction, and essays. He was recently awarded the National Humanities Medal, the Cleanth Brooks Medal for Lifetime Achievement by the Fellowship of Southern Writers, and the Louis Bromfield Society Award. For more than forty years he has lived and farmed with his wife, Tanya, in Kentucky.





Product details

Paperback: 240 pages
Publisher: Counterpoint; Reprint edition (September 15, 2015)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 161902599X
ISBN-13: 978-1619025998
Product Dimensions: 6.9 x 0.8 x 9 inches
Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars 32 customer reviews
Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #25,912 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
#1818 in Social Sciences (Books)
#56 in Food Science (Books)
#4 in Agricultural Science History


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Biography
Wendell E. Berry (born August 5, 1934) is an American novelist, poet, environmental activist, cultural critic, and farmer. A prolific author, he has written many novels, short stories, poems, and essays. He is an elected member of the Fellowship of Southern Writers, a recipient of The National Humanities Medal, and the Jefferson Lecturer for 2012. He is also a 2013 Fellow of The American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Berry was named the recipient of the 2013 Richard C. Holbrooke Distinguished Achievement Award. On January 28, 2015, he became the first living writer to be ushered into the Kentucky Writers Hall of Fame.
Bio from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Photo by Guy Mendes (Guy Mendes) [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons.



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L. Johnson

5.0 out of 5 starsIndustrial Agriculture Wrecks Not Just Health But CommunitySeptember 27, 2016
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This is the classic expression of Wendell Berry's particular type of environmentalism, one that does not see agriculture as the problem, and pristine and untouched nature preserves as the solution, but specifically targets large-scale industrial agriculture. Berry exposes the many ways in which we pay more in hidden costs for our cheap and fattening "food" and how the industrial food system has not only wrecked our diet but families and communities in the process. Perhaps inadvertently Berry reveals what today's conservatives have missed, that there's a world of difference between multinational conglomerates that process corn into all sorts of by-products and food for beef cattle, and more local farms and businesses. The former breaks down communities, and the other (at least potentially) builds them up. One controls more of your life than you think, and the other hands your life and your freedom back to you. Berry's knowledgeable about all the old farming practices that many have forgotten, practices also promoted by Michael Pollan, that eliminate much or all of the need for external "inputs" such as fertilizer, pesticides and antibiotics. He has one foot in the past, and the other firmly planted in our future, hoping to bridge the gap.

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Wayne F Reed

4.0 out of 5 starschemical farm treats animal manure as ‘toxic waste’ and so creates itself the problem of disposing of the waste instead of usefully composting itJune 7, 2018
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Much of Wendell’s thinking struck a deep, long term cord with me. But I will state up front that , while I think he is absolutely right in so many fundamental ways, he is quixotic beyond any reality, and so represents a ‘lost, noble cause’.
His basic premise is to decry modern technology’s inexorable lurch towards ‘efficiency’, what Spike South and I used to speak of as ‘the spirit of the hound’, the tendency of the technocracy to go after the jugular of an issue with fangs bared and no holds barred; no complex human dimensions need be considered. The growing efficiency is manifested in the legions of ‘experts and specialists’. Berry points out the modern person has become merely a ‘consumer’, who lives in a house built by a specialist, drives a car built by another specialist, eats food grown and processed by other specialists, and, after a day of work at his own specialty, comes home to be entertained by entertainment specialists on television. The consumer may live an entire life without eating any food he has produced or using a single item he has crafted.
Berry focuses on the effects of specialization on U.S. agriculture, how its growth into ‘Agribusiness’, controlled by large corporations and, abetted by the Dept. of Agriculture and the land grant colleges, has virtually destroyed the equilibrium of traditional farming. Agribusiness is a sprawling industrial complex that includes the petrochemical industry for fertilizer and fuel, heavy equipment manufacturers of tractors and other machinery, processing, packaging, and transportation networks, and wealthy financial organizations that drive farmers into debt as they are forced to acquire the new technology or perish. At one point he calls modern farmers colonies of the petrochemical industry. He calls this technologically based agriculture ‘orthodox agriculture’. He bears especial animus towards former Sectretary of Agriculture Earl Butz, who he sees as having set the tone and propagandized for Agribusiness, ‘weaponizing food’, modulating international food supplies, and depopulating the agricultural population, driving those folks off their ancestral lands and into alienation and despair in the cities.
He sees traditional farming, with a healthy dose of modern enlightenment, as the ideal; a farm that uses natural energy, that of the sun, of draft animals, of the earth, water, and of the farmers themselves, instead of full dependence on fossil fuel and heavy machinery. This farm has a multitude of crops and animals- not the unnatural monoculture touted by modern orthodoxy- uses crop rotation, animal manure as fertilizer, and other natural resources for buildings and farm operations. The orthodox, chemical farm treats animal manure as ‘toxic waste’ and so creates itself the problem of disposing of the waste instead of usefully composting it. By studying the few old fashioned remaining farms, with a special reverence for the Amish and their simple yet highly sophisticated and intelligent agricultural methods, Berry shows that productivity per acre on these traditional, manured farms, even using draft animals largely in place of tractors and other heavy machinery, is on a par with chemical farms. Furthermore, they are sustainable for generations, whereas chemical farms are not. What he doesn’t emphasize, however, is that the number of acres that can be managed per person by the traditional farm is far less than for the chemical farm. But from his perspective this is just as well, since he worries for all the rural people displaced to the cities; many could come back to the agricultural life if government land and agricultural policy were not so tilted against them. He invokes Thomas Jefferson’s idea of the U.S. populace as a multitude of small land freeholders, each with enough land to support a family and some modicum of commercial activity. Berry points out that there are many implicit assumptions in current policy, such as that, given the choice to work or not work, most people would rather not work at all. That education is only possible in schools, and not by experience, that thinking should be done in laboratories and offices, not by farmers themselves. That plants and animals, including humans, are machines, so that machine based agricultural is the most natural and desirable direction.
In short, Berry sees an Amish lifestyle as the closest to a sustainable, community-oriented, organic healthiness for a society. He is imbued of the Judeo-Christian tradition so imputes morality to all our actions and activities, and believes in an absolute good, not moral relativism; absolute good is what produces sustainable, balanced health, in its broadest sense. This is both wonderful and unattainably quixotic. I have always appreciated the Amish for their values; hard, devout work, natural integration into Earth’s ecology, and let one not grow prosperous by one’s work, rather yet more devout.
In much earlier years I had conspired with Spike South along such lines, albeit with not nearly the depth of thought or experience of Berry, that we should seek acreage, perhaps a hundred or so, possibly in the North Carolina or other mid-Atlantic state, and betake ourselves yonder, most likely with wives, to do exactly that. Begin self-sufficiency agriculture and building, creating a sustainable lifestyle, later with children to come. Instead of working out at the gym or jogging, the work itself would be the purposeful exercise for existence.
Through the years, while still in the throes of ‘being a specialist’ (scientist, whatever), this yearning never ceased, while its realization remained impractical, what with the demands of orthodox specialization and family. But lo, after several decades the stars aligned such that it became possible to purchase a modest free holding in a rural area; we acquired thirty eight beautiful acres of Mississippi hardwood hills at a low cost. While un-natural – it is the product of urban wealth earned through specialization, and exported to the country- it is exhilarating. There is every opportunity to experiment with nature, with agriculture, with forestry, with watersheds, with building, with weather, the opportunity to learn and both succeed and fail. For me it is a joy to exert the body, sweat, pant, and groan at these labors, and fall delightfully weary into slumber at night. The artificiality, of course, is that it is all done as a homesteading hobby, yet with an economic anchor in specialty, in the city of New Orleans, so failures don’t lead to ruin.
There are many, many movements and sub-currents throughout the U.S. trying to go against the monoculture, chemical farm. Farm to table, the locavore movement, school garden plots, and the like, all contest the hegemony of General Mills, Wendy’s, factory farms and the like. The locus of arguments against this is that, to sustain seven billion people on the planet the chemical farm is a necessity, and so it is actually selfish to think of re-personalizing agriculture, as billions could starve. Berry’s counter argument is that, no, productivity of sustainable, organic farming is on a par with chemical/heavy machinery farming so this dire outlook is untrue. However, for the organic, sustainable approach to work, a large part of the populace would have to become rural again. In Physics, the principle of least action, of a system falling into the lowest energy state available seems to apply well to humans. To demand that they endothermically trudge back up hill and work their bodies hard to feed themselves is like commanding water to flow upwards. Aint’ gonna happen. But gotta love Berry’s unbridled idealism.

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Martin Johnson

5.0 out of 5 starsRelevant in 2017July 16, 2017
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In the opening chapter Berry talks about exploiters and nurturers and carries this theme throughout the book comparing "orthodox" and un-orthodox farming methods. He says: "The exploiter wishes to earn as much as possible by as little work as possible; the nurturer expects, certainly, to have a decent living from his work, but his characteristic wish is to work as well as possible." He is talking about the difference between someone in an agribusiness, like an industrial farmer, and, for example, an Amish farmer. Berry offers the background and philosophical underpinnings of the state of agriculture today; this is as relevant in 2017 as it was 40 years ago when it was first published.

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Binyamin Klempner

4.0 out of 5 starsBut it just isn't my favorite. In my opinionNovember 15, 2017
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I know that The Unsettling of America is Berry's classic. But it just isn't my favorite. In my opinion, Berry's books "What Are People For?" and "Bringing it to the Table" are easier to read and more enjoyable.

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mothersuds

5.0 out of 5 starsor pretty much any American with a vested interest in this ...March 15, 2017
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Probably the most important book I've read in a long time - even more relevant today than it was when it was written. This book is a must read for anyone concerned about the economy, agriculture, our food system, the environment, or pretty much any American with a vested interest in this nation.

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M. Danielson

5.0 out of 5 starsAn important book in spite of its ageJanuary 3, 2019
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Although this book shows its age, it is still a vital read. We continue to drift away from the land and community. Our last, best hope is to break free of both nostalgia and mindless progressiveness and look seriously at what feeds our bodies, minds, and souls.

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G. Long

5.0 out of 5 starsA must read for anyone serious about US as a cultural entityJune 26, 2018
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I was absolutely entralled. This is one of my favorite books. A university degree should require this book.

Deeply insightful about why some old fashioned stuff actually matters like topos and relationships and restraint.

At the same time the book comes back to very practical discussion of ag and ed policy and why those have failed us.


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Amazon Customer

5.0 out of 5 starsPrescient, disturbing, and inspiringApril 21, 2017
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Still relevant. The growing appreciation for the local farmers has not pernetrated far into the consciousness of policy makers of either party.

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