Showing posts with label conservation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conservation. Show all posts

Ecofascism: Lessons from the German Experience Review

Ecofascism: Lessons from the German Experience
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In this fascinating and compelling book, authors and social critics Peter Staudenmaier and Janet Biehl look at ecofascism in Germany. The book is really a compilation of two essays. In the first essay, Peter Staudenmaier looks at the history of ecofascism in nineteenth and early twentieth century Germany, and shows how integral ecology (or at least a certain version of ecology) was to the Nazi Party. In the second essay, Janet Biehl shows how ecofasism is alive and well in Germany, seeking (sometimes openly) to reestablish Nazi policy even while aligned with left and libertarian ecological groups.
I must say I found this book to be absolutely fascinating. I have read about the Nazi's attachment to certain quasi-religious, quasi-New Age philosophies, but Peter Staudenmaier's essay does an excellent job of showing the interlocking wholeness of the Nazi "Blood and Soil" philosophy. Janet Biehl's essay on the fascism of today's anti-human, anti-technology Green movements is sobering, even terrifying.
Now, Peter Staudenmaier and Janet Biehl are committed leftists and ecologists, so this book is certainly not intended to be any sort of an attack on ecology. But, what it is is a very sobering and informative look at modern ecology, and a call to arms by those who do not wish to see a resurgence of fascism on the world stage...even if it's a green-fascism. I highly recommend this book to all thinking people.

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The reappearance of fascism in many western countries threatens all the freedoms the left movements have managed to gain over the last half century. Equally disconcerting is the attempt by fascist ideologists and political groups to use ecology in the service of social reaction. This effort is not without long historical roots in Germany, both in its nineteenth-century romanticism and in the Third Reich in the present century. In order to preserve the liberatory aspects of ecology, the authors, as social ecologists, explore the German experience of fascism and derive from it historical lessons about the political use of ecology. Comprised of two essays—"Fascist Ideology: The Green Wing of the Nazi Party and its Historical Antecedents" and "Ecology and the Modernization of Fascism in the German Ultra-Right,"—Ecofascism examines aspects of German fascism, past and present, in order to draw essential lessons from them for ecology movements both in Germany and elsewhere.

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No Impact Man: The Adventures of a Guilty Liberal Who Attempts to Save the Planet, and the Discoveries He Makes About Himself and Our Way of Life in the Process Review

No Impact Man: The Adventures of a Guilty Liberal Who Attempts to Save the Planet, and the Discoveries He Makes About Himself and Our Way of Life in the Process
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No Impact Man
By Colin Beavan
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, Publishers
ISBN: 978-0-374-22288-8
I love to read environmental writing. There are so many good books available right now on the subject of the environment and global warming that a person can become overwhelmed. I believe this book is a must if you have to limit what you read in this category. (But please don't limit yourself!)
There are so many things to like about this book that I will try to do it justice in this review.
First of all I like the subject. I think that this timely subject must be written about if there is any possibility for changing the status quo. Mr. Beavan takes on the subject from an if not me then who perspective that shows his willingness to step outside of his safety zone and do his part to find some answers.
Secondly I like the fact that one of the main focuses of this book is how changing our way of life to one that does not impact the earth also has an equally positive impact on our personal relationships. I think that it is important that people start to realize the benefits that we all receive when our lifestyles are no longer focused on the act of consumption.
Third, I like his commitment throughout the whole project to do the best he could. Sometimes we are not perfect (thank heavens) but the act of trying is what makes the biggest impact. This commitment carried over to the production of the book itself. It was produced as low impact as possible and shows what can be done if the desire is there.
From a writing standpoint I feel that Mr. Beavan did a wonderful job of making the transitions from information that he has researched, His own personal feelings, and anecdotes on the affect this project had on his family. My interest was always kept happily looking forward to reading just a little more and for the most part I found the flow of the book to move well. Occasionally, I did find some sentences that I had to go over a time or two to make sure that my comprehension was correct. In general it was a very relaxing read. I also appreciate the fact that he included in the back of the book additional places to find information.
What this book does not have a great deal of is detailed information on how they accomplished going off of the grid. Mind you there was a lot of discussion of mason jars and bicycles and a specific change that had to find a solution in each chapter, but not very many more details on how to go off the grid. Near the end of the book, however, you will find a brief outline of a typical day in their household. For the most part the book seemed to be about how they went about researching the information that they needed to accomplish their goals given their specific situation. I think that if this idea is to work for us we all need to do a bit of our own research. I live in Los Angeles. What I have to do to have no impact, especially in the area of transportation is much different than it is in New York. So instead of being told exactly what to do, I found myself being inspired to find the way that works best for my family and my self.
"Tis a gift to be simple, tis a gift to be free"
Thank you for such an inspiring work.

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