An Unnatural Order: The Roots of Our Destruction of NatureLantern Books, 2004 - 319 pages First published by Simon & Schuster in 1993 and then by Continuum in 1998, Jim Mason's An Unnatural Order has become a classic. Now in a new Lantern edition, the book explores, from an anthropological, sociocultural, and holistic perspective, how and why we have cut ourselves off from other animals and the natural world, and the toll this has taken on our consciousness, our ability to steward nature wisely, and the will to control our own tendencies. Jim Mason writes: "My own view is that the primal worldview, updated by a scientific understanding of the living world, offers the best hope for a human spirituality. Life on earth is the miracle, the sacred. The dynamic living world is the creator, the First Being, the sustainer, and the final resting place for all living beings--humans included. We humans evolved with other living beings; their lives informed our lives. They provided models for our existence; they shaped our minds and culture. With dominionism out of the way, we could enjoy a deep sense of kinship with the other animals, which would give us a deep sense of belonging to our living world. "Then, once again, we could feel for this world. We could feel included in the awesome family of living beings. We could feel our continuum with the living world. We could, once again, feel a genuine sense of the sacred in the world." |
From inside the book
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... century , cotton was the principal crop , with wheat or corn occasionally taking the lead . Elsewhere in the nation , demand was high for these crops because of a combination of European immigration , industrialization , urban growth ...
... centuries of controlling , shaping , and battling plants , animals , and natural processes — all things of the world around us that we put under the word nature . Controlling — and alternately battling — nature is 1: Dominionism Identified.
... pilgrims in North America , " and when seventeenth - century Englishmen moved to Massachusetts , part of their case for occupying Indian territory would be that those who did not themselves subdue and cultivate the 22 An Unnatural Order.
... centuries , the stories , fables , legends , and myths that had been told from generation to generation in verse , song , and ceremony . People moved about from place to place , and traders carried these stories and myths . While ...
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Contents
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21 | |
Before Agriculture A World Alive and Ensouled | 50 |
Animals The Most Moving Things in the World | 91 |
Agriculture A New Relationship with Nature a New World Order for Living Beings | 118 |
Misothery and the Reduction of Animals and Nature | 158 |
Misogyny and the Reduction of Women and Female Power | 186 |
Racism and Colonialism Dominating Lands and Others | 210 |
Rituals of Dominionism Then and Now | 242 |
Beyond Dominionism | 269 |
References | 299 |
Index | 310 |
Other editions - View all
UNNATURAL ORDER: The Roots of Our Destruction of Nature?fully Revised and ... JIM. MASON No preview available - 2021 |