This winning memoir is both a retrospective of the ecology movement of the late 1960s and a personal account of Mills's own shift from environmentalism on an abstract and global scale to bioregionalism, which is practical and local in scope.
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This winning memoir is both a retrospective of the ecology movement of the late 1960s and a personal account of Mills's own shift from environmentalism on an abstract and global scale to bioregionalism, which is practical and local in scope.
Read Less
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Seller's Description:
VERY GOOD in VERY GOOD jacket. 1ST. 6.75 x 1 x 9.5 inches. pp. 253. Publisher: Random House, Inc. (September 30, 1989) Language: English ISBN-10: 0871566583 ISBN-13: 978-0871566584 Item Weight: 1.2 POUNDS Dimensions: 6.75 x 1 x 9.5 inches. In 1969, Mills, then a college valedictorian, leapt into the fledgling ecology movement by announcing that she would never bring a child into an already overpopulated world. In succeeding years she plunged into San Francisco's environmental activism, working with David Brower, Stewart Brand, Paul Ehrlich and Joan MacIntyre, among others. This winning memoir is both a retrospective of the movement and a personal account of Mills's own shift from environmentalism on an abstract and global scale to bioregionalism, which is practical and local in scope.
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Seller's Description:
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