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Pilgrims To The Wild
University of Utah Press, 1993 Paper: 978-0-87480-412-6 Library of Congress Classification PS163.O18 1993 Dewey Decimal Classification 818.08
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ABOUT THIS BOOK
Pilgrims to the Wild is a survey of American writers who have responded to their encounters with the natural world. Ranging in its treatment from Thoreau’s important but neglected essay, 'Walking,' to the exuberant letters of the young artist Everett Ruess (who disappeared in the Escalante canyonlands), this is a broadly based exploration that brings to bear Eastern and Western classical philosophy, as well as contemporary critical theory, on a distinctive tradition of American Writing—those works concerned with the human relationship to the nonhuman world. In addition to offering a fresh interpretation of classic authors such a Thoreau and Muir, this book introduces readers to the less widely known but equally fascinating writers Clarence King and Mary Austin. See other books on: American prose literature | Naturalists | Nature in literature | Wild | Wilderness areas See other titles from University of Utah Press |
Nearby on shelf for American literature / Treatment of special subjects, classes:
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