}The closing years of this century find Americans skeptical of modern institutionsthe political system, the gloablized economy, the public schoolsand their abilities to solve the most basic problems of our time. Amid the rising tide of discontent, the public debatesincluding the culture warsseem to be a mere spinning of wheels.In a penetrating analysis of our times, Charlene Spretnak asserts that both the liberal and conservative sides in those debates are situated in the very orientation that created the modern crisis: ...
Read More
}The closing years of this century find Americans skeptical of modern institutionsthe political system, the gloablized economy, the public schoolsand their abilities to solve the most basic problems of our time. Amid the rising tide of discontent, the public debatesincluding the culture warsseem to be a mere spinning of wheels.In a penetrating analysis of our times, Charlene Spretnak asserts that both the liberal and conservative sides in those debates are situated in the very orientation that created the modern crisis: the mechanistic worldview with Homo economicus at the center. The grand claims of modernity no longer inspire confidence because its destructive effects seem to be multiplying. The author, an influential public intellectual, speaks poignantly to our growing sense of what has been lost and what is slipping away.Yet Charlene Spretnak argues persuasively that the intensification of the modern crises is not inevitable and is already being challenged by an impressive network of corrective efforts. The new acceptance of holistic medicine (forced by the healthcare crisis, the new understandings in science of natures powers of dynamic creativity and self-organization, the new political opposition of community-based activists to the forces of globalization, and the new surge of independence efforts by ancient nations that have been devoured by modern statesall are part of an emergent value system that counters the modern conception of liberty as a flight from body, nature and place.After identifying epochal rumblings embedded in the nightly news in the 1990s, Charlene Spretnak illuminates the sources of the modern condition with exceptional clarity. Moreover, she reframes the other history of the modern era: the ecospiritual lineage of movements that resisted the corrosive effects of the industrialized modern world. These include the Arts and Crafts movement, the cosmological schools of painting, the stream of Modernist writers and artists who did not embrace the machine aesthetic after World War One, and Gandhis Constructive Program. The grassroots movements today that are forging a new politics of local and regional revitalization beyond left-and-right are heir to a rich tradition, to which the author brings original interpretations.Finally, Charlene Spretnak concludes her wideranging exploration with an engaging story of an American heartland city in the near future that has largely decoupled from the destructive dynamics of the globalized economy and initiated a range of pragmatic alternatives in its region.Both a sharp critique and a graceful performance of the art of the possible, The Resurgence of the Real changes the way we thing about living in the modern world. }
Read Less
Add this copy of The Resurgence of the Real: Body, Nature, and Place in to cart. $19.99, like new condition, Sold by Noetic Books rated 3.0 out of 5 stars, ships from WILLIAMSPORT, PA, UNITED STATES, published 1997 by Basic Books (AZ).
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Fine. Unread octavo Hardcover with Fine DJ in Like New condition as shown. iI ship pronto same day. Gift quality copy. Stated First Edition, May 1997. Addison-Wesley Publishing Co, ISBN: 9780201534191. Black remainder mark on bottom page block. Binding, pages perfect condition. Cream cloth boards, quarter-bound with green wrapped spine, gold lettered, square binding. 6.4x9.5x1.0 in. 277pp. incl. index. I ship daily, track, and guarantee. Title: The Resurgence of the Real: Body, Nature, and Place in the Hypermodern World. Author Charlene Spretnak is coauthor of "Green Politics" and an intellectual spokesman for eco-politics. [Box23_G0041].