Thrillcraft : the environmental consequences of motorized recreation / edited by George Wuerthner.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: White River Junction, Vt. : Chelsea Green Pub. Co.Copyright date: ©2007Edition: First editionDescription: xxxvi, 274 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), color map ; 35 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
Audience:
  • General
ISBN:
  • 9781933392660
  • 1933392665
  • 9781933392677 (pbk.)
  • 1933392673 (pbk.)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 577.27 22
LOC classification:
  • QH545.A43 T47 2007
Online resources:
Contents:
Estrangement from nature -- How did it come to this? -- Environmental impacts -- Bearing witness across america -- Stopping eco-terrorism on our american soil -- A light at the end of the tunnel -- A choice for public lands.
Summary: "Monster trucks, all-terrain vehicles, snowmobiles, dirt bikes, dune buggies, jet skis, and SUVs--how we love our carbon-spewing, rip-roaring, earth-bashing motorized craft, but, oh, what havoc they wreak. Never before has the damage done by ORVs to earth, water, air, plants, wildlife, and our own senses and sensibility been so graphically documented as in this supersized, in-your-face album of photographs and essays by scientists, nature writers, and social critics, among them Rick Bass, James Howard Kunstler, and Ted Williams. Edited by ecologist Wuerthner, this forthright condemnation of "motorized wreckreation" details the abuse of public lands and trails, and addresses issues of liberty and responsibility. Writers analyze our fascination with machine power, our estrangement from nature, and the societal frustrations that induce ORV drivers to tear up the landscape. Helmeted, gloved, and mud-splattered thrill crafters, looking like space soldiers on an alien planet, are contrasted with people walking serenely. Given global warming and peak oil prices, the thrill-craft craze seems wanton and fatalistic, and while some readers will find this bold volume insulting, many will find it truthful and affirming."
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Estrangement from nature -- How did it come to this? -- Environmental impacts -- Bearing witness across america -- Stopping eco-terrorism on our american soil -- A light at the end of the tunnel -- A choice for public lands.

"Monster trucks, all-terrain vehicles, snowmobiles, dirt bikes, dune buggies, jet skis, and SUVs--how we love our carbon-spewing, rip-roaring, earth-bashing motorized craft, but, oh, what havoc they wreak. Never before has the damage done by ORVs to earth, water, air, plants, wildlife, and our own senses and sensibility been so graphically documented as in this supersized, in-your-face album of photographs and essays by scientists, nature writers, and social critics, among them Rick Bass, James Howard Kunstler, and Ted Williams. Edited by ecologist Wuerthner, this forthright condemnation of "motorized wreckreation" details the abuse of public lands and trails, and addresses issues of liberty and responsibility. Writers analyze our fascination with machine power, our estrangement from nature, and the societal frustrations that induce ORV drivers to tear up the landscape. Helmeted, gloved, and mud-splattered thrill crafters, looking like space soldiers on an alien planet, are contrasted with people walking serenely. Given global warming and peak oil prices, the thrill-craft craze seems wanton and fatalistic, and while some readers will find this bold volume insulting, many will find it truthful and affirming."

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