Monday, September 9, 2019

9.19 CCC: Faith, Science & Progress; Books; Solidarity; Of Note; etc.


CREATION CORNER, Sept. 2019:  Faith, Science & Progress; Books; Solidarity; Of Note; etc.

A 2019 "Faith and Science" tour, made possible by Interfaith Power & Light (IPL/ "A Religious Response to Global Warming", Susan Hendershot, president) with the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS/ "Science for a Healthy Planet and Safer World"), is taking place in southern U.S. churches. UCS president Ken Kimmell writes about this in the current summer 2019 UCS Catalyst newsletter, saying that science demonstrates the urgency of the climate change problem, and that faith provides the moral propeller for action.

“What If” Progress:  Among UCS proposals for progress, in the "if only" category, are:

1.  If a family of four eats half as much meat, they avoid as much CO2 as not driving a car for 6 months.

 2. If everyone in the U.S. reduced emissions by 20%, that's like shutting down 200 mid-sized coal plants (one-third of the nation's total).

 3. If air leaks were caulked and sealed in every home in a small city, it would cut as much CO2 as conserving 1.6 million gallons of gasoline each year.

 4. If everyone in the U.S. improved their homes' energy efficiency by just 10%, it would cut as much CO2 as taking some 25 million cars off the road.

 5. When you cut your emissions by 20%, you save more CO2 than you would by turning off your electricity for one year.

 6. If 20 friends stop drinking bottled water, soda, and juice, the avoided plastic would cut as much CO2 annually as a car would emit driving nearly halfway around the equator.

Your individual choices can make a difference for the climate.  Scale It Up!

Real Progress:

Coal Power in 1998 comprised 52% of the U.S. electricity mix; by 2018, its share dropped nearly in half, to 27% (source: UCS).

Renewable energy employed 11 million people worldwide by the end of 2018 (source: Sierra magazine).

Renewable energy generated more than coal did, for the first time in the U.S., in April 2019 (source: Sierra).

U.S. Wind and Solar electricity generation increased sixfold between 2008 and 2018, and now accounts for more than 8% of our nation's power supply (source: UCS).

Today the fastest-growing job in the nation is a wind turbine technician.  Number two?  Solar installer (source: Jay Inslee, Governor of Washington state).

Twentieth Year of the Brower Environmental Youth Awards.  See www.broweryouthawards.org.

Potential Progress:

Climate Strike demonstrations, Sept. 20-27, worldwide.  See www.globalclimatestrike.net for actions near you.

The Climate Witness Project is an effort of the Office of Social Justice, Christian Reformed Church in N. America.

Deep Green Faith: Holy Forest Kinship is a project of The Beecken Center (Shaping Faith Into Action).

The American Humanist Association Environmental Response Effort can be seen at www.HereForClimate.org.  Environmentalism is one of their "Ten Committments".  Others are critical thinking, ethical development, peace and social justice, service and participation, altruism, humility, global awareness, responsibility, and empathy.

Of Note:

Beyond Carbon Campaign, Beyond Coal Campaign, both initiatives of former NYC mayor Michael Bloomberg.

The Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (New York State) addresses and mitigates the effects of climate change by cutting Greenhouse Gases, moving to a greater reliance on renewable energy sources, and will create green jobs to promote environmental justice. It is said to be the most ambitious legislation of its kind in the United States.  New York City also has its own comprehensive version.

Extinction threatens 1 million species of plants and animals due to human activity (source: Sierra Magazine).

Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR), following that of prior technologies of steam, the combustion engine, and computing, consists of technology-driven experimental systems of sensors, robotic automation, streaming data, artificial intelligence and machine learning, nanotechnology, synthetic biology, blockchains, the Internet of Things, and other "disruptive technologies" etc. that are being deployed within transport, healthcare, agriculture, defense, energy, water, production, retail, etc., that may re-edit our genomes, hack our weather systems, and transform our food systems, our bodies, and our democracies.  See the autumn issue of Earth Island Journal.

The Fourth National Climate Assessment report from the U.S. Global Change Research Program.

The Great Acceleration (definition): Our age of disorienting ecological, social, and technological change.

Greenest schools of 2019 as ranked by the Sierra Club: see list at sc.org/coolschools.

July 2019 surpasses July 2016 as the hottest month in recorded history.

KeepCup: World's first barista standard reusable coffee cup, available in glass or BPA, BPS-free plastic.  Replaces disposable cup.

Low Technology Institute: For nonindustrial/subsistence technology.

Low-Tech Magazine.

Microplastic ingestion of 5 grams each week (the potential world average per person) is equivalent of eating a credit card.

Web site for 100 uncontacted tribes worldwide, and film, is at survivalinternational.org/uncontacted.

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Books

Carbon Democracy: Political Power in the Age of Oil. Timothy Mitchell (2011).

The Democracy of Suffering: Life on the Edge of Catastrophe, Philosophy in the Anthropocene.  Todd Dufresne (2019).

Earth in Human Hands: Shaping Our Planet's Future.  David Grinspoon (2016).

Eating Animals.  Jonathan Safran Foer.

The Green Cure: How shinrin-yoku, earthing, going outside, or simply opening a window can heal us.  Alice Peck (2019).

Green Homes: New Ideas for Sustainable Living.  Sergi Costa Duran..

Ground Truth: A Guide to Tracking Climate Change at Home.  Mark L. Hineline (2018).

The Living Shore: Rediscovering a Lost World.  Rowan Jacobsen (2009).

Native Science: Natural Laws of Interdependence.  Gregory Cajete.

October, Or Autumnal Tints.  Henry David Thoreau.

On Fire: The (Burning) Case for a Green New Deal.  Naomi Klein (2019).

Rising: Dispatches from the New American Shore.  Elizabeth Rush (2019)

Rooted and Rising: Voices of Courage in a Time of Climate Change.  Rev. Dr. Margaret Bullitt-Jonas. 2019.

Shadows on the Gulf: A Journey Through Our Last Great Wetland.  Rowan Jacobsen (2011).

Symphony in C: Carbon and the Evolution of (Almost) Everything.  Robert M. Hazen (2019).

The Thinking Person's Guide to Climate Change.  Robert Henson (new edition, 2019).

The World Without Us.  Alan Weisman

A Year with Nature: An Almanac.  Marty Crump (2018).

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The following five entries are reviewed in The New York Review of Books for Sept. 26, 2019 in an article by Jonathan Mingle, "Our Lethal Air."

The Invisible Killer: The Rising Global Threat of Air Pollution---and How We Can Fight Back.  Gary Fuller.

Choked: Life and Breath in the Age of Air Pollution.  Beth Gardiner.

Clearing the Air: The Beginning and the End of Air Pollution.  Tim Smedley.

Integrated Science Assessment for Particulate Matter (External Review Draft, 2018), US EPA.

Letter to EPA  Administrator on the EPA's Integrated Science Assessment for Particulate Matter, April 11, 2019, Review by the Chartered Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee.

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Climate Lit(erature)

10:04.  Ben Lerner.
After the Flood.  Kassandra Montag.
MaddAddam trilogy.  Margaret Atwood.

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Films re: Reconnecting with Nature

Go to Nature-Rx.org for Dream Tree Film series (Justin Bogardus, writer-director).

Global Warming Destruction Film:

The Day After Tomorrow (2004).

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Solidarity: An Important Contrast

Bryan Walsh, author of the book End Times: A Brief Guide to the End of the World (2019), suggests our reluctance to act now to reduce the effects of climate change is due to how our brains react to thoughts of the future: "If we view our own selves in the future as virtual strangers, how much less do we care about the lives of generations yet to be born?"  (source, "A lack of urgency", Time magazine, Sept. 2-9, 2019, p. 30).

Compare that with the article "One For All", suggesting that "to avert global catastrophe, we urgently need to resurrect the ancient ideal of solidarity" (not charity, not philanthropy, not empathy or benevolence, not 'helping others', not private, spontaneous gestures of kindness, not allyship, not altruism, not generosity, not identity politics).

Solidarity: the ways we are bound together, and how we can act, in concert, to change our circumstances; a reciprocity rooted in the acknowledgment that our lives are intertwined; a collective indebtedness and obligation; shared responsibility, shared risk, shared sacrifice, shared reward; a state of interdependence and mutual aid; carrying one another's burden; a transcendence of our own limited personal experiences and then building bonds and diverse coalitions; an expression of the intrinsic debts we have to one another, to humanity; a social ethos; answering the call to one's conscience;  a response required by an understanding of one's own unacceptable complicity.

"One For All", by Astra Taylor and Leah Hunt-Hendrix, may be seen in the September 2019 issue of The New Republic, pgs. 24-29.

Thursday, August 1, 2019

8/19 CCC: Books, CDs and DVDs, Announcements, etc.

8/19 Creation Corner Column: Books, CDs and DVDs, Announcements

Books

Adapt: How We Can Learn from Nature's Strangest Inventions.  Amina Khan.

Adventures of a Young Naturalist: The Zoo Quest Expeditions.  David Attenborough.

Anatomies: A Cultural History of the Human Body.  Hugh Aldersey-Williams.

Animal Messengers: An A-Z Guide to Signs and Omens in the Natural World.  Regula Meyer.

Bees: A Natural History.  Christopher O'Toole.

Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst.  Robert M. Sapolsky.

The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2017.  Hope Jahren.  Tim Folger, series editor.

Bloomsbury Pocket Guides To:
Butterflies, by Bob Gibbons
Garden Birds, by Nigel Blake
Insects, by Bob Gibbons
Tracks and Signs, by Gerard Gorman
Trees and Shrubs, by Bob Gibbons
Wild Flowers, by Bob Gibbons

The Birder's Companion.  Stephen Moss.

Birding Without Borders: An Obsession, A Quest, and the Biggest Year in the World.  Noah Strycker.

The Brother Gardeners: Botany, Empire, and the Birth of an Obsession.  Andrea Wolf.

The Butterflies of North America: Titian Peale's Lost Manuscript.  American Museum of Natural History, Titian Ramsay Peale, illus.

Buzz: The Nature and Necessity of Bees. Thor Hanson.

Cannibalism: A Perfectly Natural History.  Bill Schutt.

Censoring Science: Inside the Political Attack on Dr. James Hansen and the Truth of Global Warming.  Mark Bowen.

Climate Cover-Up: The Crusade to Deny Global Warming.  James Hoggan with Richard Littlemore.

The Cosmic Serpent: DNA and the Origins of Knowledge.  Jeremy Narby.

Countdown: Our Last, Best Hope for a Future on Earth?  Alan Wiseman.

Dinosaurs Without Bones: Dinosaur Lives Revealed by Their Trace Fossils.  Anthony J. Martin.

The Discovery of Global Warming.  Spencer R. Weart.

A Dog's History of America: How Our Best Friend Explored, Conquered, and Settled a Continent.  Mark Derr.

Eager: The Surprising Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter.  Ben Goldfarb.

The Earth: From Myths to Knowledge.  Hubert Krivine.

Eating Animals.  Jonathan Safran Foer.

Ecovillages Around the World: 20 Regenerative Designs for Sustainable Communities.  Frederica Miller, ed. 

The Elegant Universe: Superstrings, Hidden Dimensions, and the Quest for the Ultimate Theory.  Brian Greene. 

Elephant Company: The Inspiring Story of an Unlikely Hero and the Animals Who Helped Him Save Lives in World War II.  Vicki Constantine Croke.

Encounters With Nature Spirits: Co-creating with the Elemental Kingdom.  R. Ogilvie Crombie.

The Farmer's Son: Calving Season on a Family Farm.  John Connell.

A Field Guide to Your Own Backyard.  John Hanson Mitchell.

Fifty Places to Go Birding Before You Die: Birding Experts Share the World's Greatest Destinations.  Chris Santella.

The Findhorn Garden Story: Pioneering a New Vision of Man and Nature in Cooperation.  The Findhorn Community.

Finding Sanctuary in Nature: Simple Ceremonies in the Native American Tradition for Healing Yourself and Others.  Jim PathFinder Ewing.

Flowering Plants: A Pictorial Guide to the World's Flora.  V. H. Heywood, et al.

Founding Gardeners: The Revolutionary Generation, Nature, and the Shaping of the American Nation.  Andrea Wolf.

Future Sacred: The Connected Creativity of Nature.  Julie J. Morley.

Good Birders Still Don't Wear White: Passionate Birders Share the Joys of Watching Birds.  Lisa A. White & Jeffrey A. Gordon, eds.

The Grand Food Bargain: and the Mindless Drive for More.  Kevin D. Walker.

The Great Conversation and the Care of the Soul.  Belden Lane.

The Guide to Walden Pond: An Exploration of the History, Nature, Landscape, and Literature of One of America's Most Iconic Places.  Robert M. Thorson.

Half-Earth: Our Planet's Fight for Life.  Edward O. Wilson.

The Heart That Is Loved Never Forgets: Recovering From Loss When Humans and Animals Lose Their Companions.  Kaetheryn Walker.

Heaven's Breath: A Natural History of the Wind.  Lyall Watson.

The Hidden Life of Dogs.  Elizabeth Marshall Thomas.

Historical Perspectives on Climate Change.  James Rodger Fleming.  1998.

How Animals Talk: And Other Pleasant Studies of Birds and Beasts.  William J. Long.  Foreword by Rupert Sheldrake.

How Enlightenment Changes Your Brain: The New Science of Transformation.  Andrew Newberg and Mark Robert Waldman.

Inheritors of the Earth: How Nature is Thriving in an Age of Extinction.  Chris D. Thomas.

The Invention of Nature.  Andrea Wolf.

Irreplaceable: The Fight to Save Our Wild Places.  Julian Hoffman.

Katz on Dogs: A Commonsense Guide To Training and Living With Dogs.  Jon Katz.

The Last Butterflies: A Scientist's Quest to Save a Rare and Vanishing Creature.  Nick Haddad.

Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder.  Richard Louv.

The Last Unicorn: A Search for One of Earth's Rarest Creatures.  William DeBuys.

The Last Whalers: Three Years in the Far Pacific with a Courageous Tribe and a Vanishing Way of Life.  Doug Bock Clark.

Look Big, and Other Tips for Surviving Animal Encounters of All Kinds.  Rachel Levin.

Losing Earth: A Recent History.  Nathaniel Rich. 2019.

Mama's Last Hug: Animal Emotions and What They Tell Us about Ourselves.  Frans De Waal.

Man Kind: Our Incredible War on Wildlife.  Cleveland Amory.  1974.

Meat Planet: Artificial Flesh and the Future of Food.  Benjamin Aides Wurgaft.

Meditations with Meister Eckhart.  Edited by Matthew Fox.

Menagerie Manor. Gerald Durrell.

The Mosquito: A Human History of Our Deadliest Predator.  Timothy C. Winegard.

Of Moths and Men: The Untold Story of Science and the Peppered Moth.  Judith Hooper.

Moving Heaven and Earth: Copernicus and the Solar System.  John Henry.

Mozart's Starling.  Lyanda Lynn Haupt.

Natural Attractions: A Field Guide to Friends, Frenemies, and Other Symbiotic Animal Relationships.  Iris Gottlieb.

The Natural Explorer: Understanding Your Landscape.  Tristan Gooley.

The Naturalist: Theodore Roosevelt, A Lifetime of Exploration, and the Triumph of American Natural History.  Darrin Lunde.

Nature is the Worst: 500 Reasons You'll Never Want to Go Outside Again.  E. Ried Ross (black humor).

Never Home Alone: From Microbes to Millipedes, Camel Crickets, and Honey Bees, the Natural History of Where We Live.  Rob Dunn.

The New Work of Dogs: Tending to Life, Love, and Family.  Jon Katz.

An Ocean Garden: The Secret Life of Seaweed.  Josie Iselin.

Penguins and Other Seabirds.  Matt Sewell.

Peterson Field Guide to Bird Sounds of Eastern North America.  Nathan Pieplow.

Peterson Field Guide to Finding Mammals in North America.  Vladimir Dinets.

Pig Tales: An Omnivore's Quest for Sustainable Meat.  Barry Estabrook.

Raising Wild: Dispatches from a Home in the Wilderness.  Michael P. Branch.

Scale: The Universal Laws of Life and Death in Organisms, Cities and Companies.  Geoffrey West.

Science as a Contact Sport: Inside the Battle to Save Earth's Climate.  Stephen Schneider.

Seeing Seeds: A Journey Into the World of Seedheads, Pods, and Fruit.  Teri Dunn Chace.

The Shepherd's View.  James Rebanks.

Silence: A Social History of One of the Least Understood Elements of Our Lives.  Jane Brox.

Six Impossible Things Before Breakfast: The Evolutionary Origins of Belief.  Lewis Wolpert.

Slime: How Algae Created Us, Plague Us, and Just Might Save Us.  Ruth Kissinger.

The Small Heart of Things: Being at Home in a Beckoning World.  Julian Hoffman.

The Smell of Fresh Rain: The Unexpected Pleasures of Our Most Elusive Sense. Barney Shaw.

The Storm of the Century: Tragedy, Heroism, Survival, and the Epic True Story of America's Deadliest Natural Disaster/The Great Gulf Hurricane of 1900.  Al Roker.

Stuffed and Starved: The Hidden Battle for the World Food System.  Raj Pate.

Tales From Concrete Jungles: Urban Birding Around the World.  David Lindo.

The Technology Trap: Capital, Labor and Power in the Age of Automation.  Carl Benedikt Frey.

Things That Are: Essays.  Amy Leach (Nature Writing).

The Tiger: A True Story of Vengeance and Survival.  John Vaillant.

The Turbulent Universe.  Paul Kurtz.

Underland: A Deep Time Journey.  Robert Macfarlane (see other titles by this author).

An Unspoken Hunger: Stories from the Field.  Terry Tempest Williams.

Visionary Women: How Rachel Carson, Jane Jacobs, Jane Goodall, and Alice Waters Changed Our World.  Andrea Barnet.

What I Don't Know About Animals.  Jenny Diski.

Whole Earth Discipline: An Ecopragmatist Manifesto (Why Dense Cities, Nuclear Power, Transgenic Crops, Restored Wildlands, and Geoengineering are Necessary).  Stewart Brand.

Wild Moms: Motherhood in the Animal Kingdom.  Carin Bondar.

The Wildest Place on Earth: Italian Gardens and the Invention of Wildness.  John Hanson Mitchell.

Wilted: Pathogens, Chemicals, and the Fragile Future of the Strawberry Industry.  Julie Guthman.

The World Without Us.  Alan Weisman.

Note that two books earlier cited in this blog, The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After Warming by David Wallace-Wells (blog for June 2019) and Falter: Has the Human Game Begun to Play Itself Out? by Bill McKibben (blog for April 2019) are reviewed together in the 8/15/2019 issue of The New York Review of Books, as  "Burning Down the House" by Alan Weisman.

The Wallace-Wells book, The Uninhabitable Earth, is reviewed in the 8/1/2019 issue of the London Review of Books, pages 35-36, as  "All the News is Bad" by Francis Gooding.

The Uninhabitable Earth is also reviewed in the August issue of Sojourners magazine, page 43, as "The Faith to Change (Is climate change too big for our faith?)" by Beth Norcross.  She is the executive director of the Center for Spirituality in Nature and an adjunct faculty member at Wesley Theological Seminary.

Compact Discs and DVDs 

Anote's Ark. Directed by Matthieu Rytz, re: Kiribati Nation endangered by climate change.

In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto. Michael Pollan.

Nature's Treasures: Collector's Edition.  Madacy Entertainment.

Announcements 

Michael Mann, climate scientist at Penn State University, is one of two winners of the prestigious 2019 Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement.  He shares this so-called "Nobel Prize for the Environment" with Warren M Washington of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, CO.

The Elders Climate Action effort is a project of the Elders Action Network.

Yale Environment 360 is an on-line publication from the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies.

"This summer the Bruderhof community celebrates the beginning of its hundredth year of living together in full community of goods,"  writes Peter Mommsen, quoted from the editorial "The Economics of Love" in the summer 2019 Plough Quarterly, p. 8.  Beyond being inspired by the Sermon on the Mount, Acts 2 and 4 provide the lodestar for this international Christian movement.

Proverbs 1:20-29 is quoted in full before the table of contents in Nathaniel Rich's Losing Earth: A Recent History, 2019.

                                                                              -30-

Friday, July 5, 2019

7/19 CCC: Quotes, Announcements, Books, McKibben Interview

July 2019 Creation Corner Column: Quotes, Announcements, Books, McKibben interview

Quotes

"Before we become too impressed with our ability to change nature, we might compare our work with the original."  Father Terrence (Gerald) Kardong (1936-2019).  A Benedictine monk and priest from Richardton North Dakota, he was a long time activist and leader in the Dakota Resource Council within the Western Organization of Resource Councils.

"They paved paradise to put up a parking lot", song lyric in "Big Yellow Taxi" by Joni Mitchell, 1970.

Announcements

Mother Earth News Fair has announced three dates:
August 3-4, Albany, Oregon
Sept. 13-15, Seven Springs, Pennsylvania
Oct. 19-20, Topeka, Kansas
Visit MotherEarthNewsFair for more information (Working Together to Create a Sustainable Life)

Travel adventure opportunity to see climate change up close by sailing the Northwest Passage with the ice-class expedition vessel, the Ocean Endeavor.  Info at adventurecanada. 

The Men's Journal has begun a "cause-marketing campaign" to build knowledge and support of our public lands.  See MensJournal/LandsUncompromised.

"Spirit of Place: A Theology of Water" 3-day conference of the Cedar Tree Institute, Marquette MI, Oct. 31-Nov. 2. 906-360-5072.

2019 is the centennial of the National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA).  Among other efforts, it publishes the magazine "National Parks."

Books, July 2019 

The Age of the Horse: An Equine Journey Through Human History.  Susanna Forrest.

American Earth: Environmental Writing since Thoreau.  Bill McKibben, editor (2008).

Animal Earth: The Amazing Diversity of Living Creatures.  Ross Piper.

Buzz, Sting, Bite: Why We Need Insects.  Anne Sverdrup-Thygeson.

The Cabaret of Plants: Forty Thousand Years of Plant Life and the Human Imagination.  Richard Mabey.

Caesars' Last Breath: Decoding the Secrets of the Air Around Us.  Sam Kean.

Can Poetry Save the Earth?: A Field Guide to Nature Poems.  John Felstiner.

Charles Darwin: The Man and His Influence.  Peter J. Bowler.

The Climate Swerve: Reflections on Mind, Hope, and Survival.  Robert Jay Lifton.

Cowed: The Hidden Impact of 95 Million Cows on America's Health, Economy, Politics, Culture, and Environment.  Denis Hayes and Gail Boyer Hayes.

The Cure for Catastrophe: How We Can Stop Manufacturing Natural Disasters.  Robert Muir-Wood.

Ecological Imperialism: The Biological Expansion of Europe, 900-1900, 2nd edition.  Alfred W. Crosby.

The Economics of Climate Change: The Stern Review.  Nicholas Stern.

Emerging Threats to Human Rights: Resources, Violence, and Deprivation of Citizenship.  Heather Smith-Cannoy, editor.

The Fall of the Wild: Extinction, De-Extinction, and the Ethics of Conservation.  Ben A. Minteer.

The Fate of Rome: Climate, Disease, and the End of an Empire.  Kyle Harper.

Food Justice Now!: Deepening the Roots of Social Struggle.  Joshua Sbicca.

This Land: How Cowboys, Capitalism and Corruption are Ruining the American West.  Christopher Ketcham.

The Last Butterflies: A Scientist's Quest to Save a Rare and Vanishing Creature.  Nick Haddad.

Living Lightly on the Earth: Building an Ark for Prince Edward Island 1974-76.  Steven Mannell.

Living Oil: Petroleum Culure in the American Century.  Stephanie LeMenager.

The News at the Ends of the Earth: The Print Culture of Polar Exploration. Hester Blum.

Nightingales In Berlin:  Searching for the Perfect Sound.  David Rothenberg.

The Paradox of Evolution: The Strange Relationship Between Natural Selection and Reproduction.  Stephen Rothman.

Slime: How Algae Created Us, Plague Us, and Just Might Save Us.  Ruth Kassinger.

So Little Time: Words and Images for a World in Climate Crisis. Edited by Greg Delanty and Daniel Hume.

Sustainable Compromises: A Yurt, a Straw Bale House, and Ecological Living.  Alan Boye.

The Tide: The Science and Stories Behind the Greatest Force on Earth.  Hugh Aldersey-Williams.

Urban Forests: A Natural History of Trees in the American Cityscape.  Jill Jonnes.

Underland: A Deep Time Journey.  Robert Macfarlane.

Vanishing Ice: Glaciers, Ice Sheets, and Rising Seas.  Vivien Gornitz.

Waste Not: How to Get the Most from Your Food.  Tom Colicchio, the James Beard Foundation.

Wild Sea: A History of the Southern Ocean.  Joy McCann.

Wilderness Ethics: Preserving the Spirit of Wilderness.  Laura and Guy Waterman.


Documentary DVD

How Lynn Margulis Rocked the Boat and Started a Scientific Revolution.  2017.

A recent interview with climate activist Bill McKibben occurs in the July 3 issue of The Christian Century, "The End of being human", interview with David Heim.

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He earned a B.A. from Gettysburg College (1965), and a Master's from Lock Haven University (1989), where he studied the international Green Party movement.

Wednesday, June 12, 2019

6/19 CCC: Language, Books, Nobel Prize Nominee, etc.

Creation Corner Column for June 2019: Language, Books, Nobel Prize Nominee, etc.


Suggested change of climate crisis language

The Guardian Weekly of the UK has announced (5/24) a new style guide for its environmental reporting.

Since the phrase "climate change" sounds rather passive and gentle when what scientists are talking about is a catastrophe for humanity, the new preferred terms will be "climate emergency, crisis or breakdown".

Other terms that have been updated include the use of "wildlife" rather than "biodiversity" and "climate science denier" rather than "climate skeptic".

Note: The Guardian Weekly will celebrate 100 years of publication this July.

Also note that the Friends of the Earth environmental organization, with a presence in the UK, the USA, and elsewhere, has its 50th anniversary this year.

Specieist Language (Advice from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals PETA)

"Specieist" aphorisms, phrases, metaphors and idioms that are to be avoided, and entertaining and fun substitutes proposed for such that may evolve in our language usage include:

putting all your eggs in one basket/putting all your eggplants in one basket, or, put all your berries in one bowl
curiosity killed the cat/curiosity thrilled the cat
bring home the bacon/bring home the bagels
kill two birds with one stone/feed two birds with one scone
take the bull by the horns/take the flower by the thorns
hold your horses/hold the phone
let the cat out of the bag/spill the beans
be the guinea pig/be the test tube
open a can of worms/open Pandora's box
beat a dead horse/feed a fed horse
more than one way to skin a cat/more than one way to peel a potato
what am I, chopped liver?/what am I, chopped cabbage?

Calling a person a pig implies that pigs are not intelligent, whereas they lead complex social lives and can show empathy, such as when they try to rescue their captors from fires and ponds.

Saying someone is being used as a "lab rat" trivializes the plight of rats being poisoned, blinded, burned and mutilated in laboratories.  They don't deserve to be called "lab rats" any more than asylum seekers should be called "illegal aliens."

Using such cliches can desensitize us and may normalize violence to animals.  Some argue that not eating animals is an expression of human empathy. 

To quote Gandhi:
"Racism, economic deprivation, dog fighting, cock fighting, bullfighting and rodeos are all cut from the same defective fabric: violence.  Only when we have become nonviolent towards all life will we have learned to live well ourselves."

Strive to refrain from using anti-animal expressions, and search for animal-friendly language.

Thanks to the PETA Global Spring 2019 newsletter issue 2.

NEW BOOKS

Acorn Days. (The story of the origins of the Environmental Defense Fund).  Marion Rogers.

After the Flood: Imagining the Global Environment in Early Modern Europe.  Lydia Barnett.

Anointed With Oil: How Christianity and Crude Made Modern America.  Daren Dochuk.

The Beekeeper's Lament.  Hannah Nordhaus.

Conversations with Trees.  Stephanie Kaza.

The Democracy of Suffering: Life on the Edge of Catastrophe, Philosophy in the Anthropocene.  Todd Dufresne.

Dog's Best Friend? Rethinking Canid-Human Relations.  John Sorenson & Atsuko Matsuoka, editors.

Downriver: Into the Future of Water in the West.  Heather Hansman.

The Fall of the Wild: Extinction, De-Extinction, and the Ethics of Conservation.  Ben A. Minteer.

Genesis: The Deep Origin of Societies.  Edward O. Wilson.

Green Buddhism: Practice and Compasionate Action in Uncertain Times.  Stephanie Kaza.

HOT: Living Through the Next Fifty Years on Earth.

The Lives of Bees: The Untold Story of the Honey Bee in the Wild.  Thomas D. Seeley.

Losing Earth: A Recent History.  Nathaniel Rich.

Meat Planet: Artificial Flesh and the Future of Food.  Benjamin Aides Wurgaft.

On Fire: The (Burning) Case for a Green New Deal.

Plastic Capitalism: Contemporary Art and the Drive to Waste.  Amanda Boetzkes.

Pressure Cooker: Why Home Cooking Won't Solve Our Problems and What We Can Do About It.  Sarah Bowen, Joslyn Brenton, and Sinikka Elliott.

Red Meat Republic: A Hoof-to-Table History of How Beef Changed America.  Joshua Specht.

There Is No Planet B: A Handbook for the Make or Break Years.  Mike Berners-Lee.

Thomas Berry: A Biography.  Mary Evelyn Tucker, John Grim and Andrew Angyal.

Time and the Generations: Population Ethics for a Diminishing Planet.  Partha Dasgupta.

The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After Warming.  David Wallace-Wells.  Chapter titles include: Heat Death; Hunger; Drowning; Dying Oceans; Unbreathable Air.

Vanishing Ice: Glaciers, Ice Sheets, and Rising Seas.  Vivien Gornitz.

The Water Will Come: Rising Seas, Sinking Cities, and the Remaking of the Civilized World.  Jeff Goodell.

The Way We Eat Now: How the Food Revolution Has Transformed Our Lives, Our Bodies, and Our World.  Bee Wilson.

What We Think About When We Try Not To Think About Global Warming: Toward a New Psychology of Climate Action.  Per Espen Stoknes.

Climate Fiction (aka "Cli-Fi")

An increasing number of fiction books deal with the climate crisis, and readers may also be aware of mainstream movies with the same theme (one example: "First Reformed").

A recent article in the July issue of In These Times (ITT) magazine ("Confronting the Climate Crisis Though Fiction, by Amy Brady) notes such authors as Margaret Atwood, Octavia Butler and J.G. Ballard from prior years.

Specific titles noted in the ITT piece are:

American War.  Omar El Akkad.

Back to the Garden.  Clara Hume.

The Collapse of Western Civililization: A View From the Future.  Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway.

Flight Behavior. Barbara Kingsolver.

New York 2140. Kim Stanley Robinson.

The Overstory. Richard Powers.

Note: While some are dystopian novels, others provide a hopeful narrative.  "Google" Cli-Fi for more information.

Nobel Peace Prize nominee

"...and a little child shall lead them."  Isaiah 11:6

Greta Thunberg, the teen-aged girl from Sweden helping to raise international concern for the viability of the planet, and featured on the "Next Generation Leaders" cover of TIME magazine of May 27, has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.

I first learned this from the web site for Green Horizon magazine (an international journal published by the Green Horizon Foundation),





Wisdom from the USA Depression Era

Use it up,
Wear it out,
Make it do, 
Or do without.