Vanishing America: Species Extinction, Racial Peril, and the Origins of Conservation

Vanishing America: Species Extinction, Racial Peril, and the Origins of Conservation

by Miles A. Powell
Vanishing America: Species Extinction, Racial Peril, and the Origins of Conservation

Vanishing America: Species Extinction, Racial Peril, and the Origins of Conservation

by Miles A. Powell

Hardcover

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Overview

Putting a provocative new slant on the history of U.S. conservation, Vanishing America reveals how wilderness preservation efforts became entangled with racial anxieties—specifically the fear that forces of modern civilization, unless checked, would sap white America’s vigor and stamina.

Nineteenth-century citizens of European descent widely believed that Native Americans would eventually vanish from the continent. Indian society was thought to be tied to the wilderness, and the manifest destiny of U.S. westward expansion, coupled with industry’s ever-growing hunger for natural resources, presaged the disappearance of Indian peoples. Yet, as the frontier drew to a close, some naturalists chronicling the loss of animal and plant populations began to worry that white Americans might soon share the Indians’ presumed fate.

Miles Powell explores how early conservationists such as George Perkins Marsh, William Temple Hornaday, and Aldo Leopold became convinced that the continued vitality of America’s “Nordic” and “Anglo-Saxon” races depended on preserving the wilderness. Fears over the destiny of white Americans drove some conservationists to embrace scientific racism, eugenics, and restrictive immigration laws. Although these activists laid the groundwork for the modern environmental movement and its many successes, the consequences of their racial anxieties persist.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674971561
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 11/14/2016
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.40(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Miles A. Powell is Assistant Professor of Environmental History at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.

Table of Contents

Introduction: A Nation's Park, Containing Man and Beast 1

1 Surviving Progress 14

2 Preserving the Frontier 46

3 A Line of Unbroken Descent 82

4 The Last of Her Tribe 119

5 Dead of Its Own Too-Much 158

Epilogue: De-Extinction 186

Notes 193

Acknowledgments 241

Index 243

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