I had Rod Nash as a prof. Rod had me for a student. I lived (as many) a couple chapters of this book (between 1st ed. and 2; giving 3 and beyond as gifts), and I could have used this book at that time, because its first edition preceded me and the work of many others. Warning: this is not a popular history, this is a "fully referenced" academic text, it is not easy reading. In a word: it's dense. But the book is capable of clarifying terminology confusion in the environmental movement.
An aside for context: why would one, lowly undergrad student command (too strong a word), deserve(?) respect from a prof? Well about five years before taking the first of two classes normally taught by Rod, I was an organizer of an event titled The First Environmental Teach-In which now goes by a more silly sounding name of "Earth Day". I worked with Senator Gaylord Nelson using Garrett DuBell's book (have now met and dined with Garrett who was 3,000 miles away in DC at the time, an interesting fellow). I'd attend a college where not only Rod taught but also Garrett Hardin, a population biologist who wrote the Tragedy of the Commons essay (started as a speech) in Science (I never had him for a class but he granted me electronic rights to his paper (I also found and corrected a typo)). I read this book a year before taking one of Rod's classes, and I was blown away. Here was a compilation of stuff, we could have used in 1970. We had not properly done our homework. Rod wrote the 1st edition 3 years before these events.
Another word: some readers might find parts of the early-middle third a little tedious. This is understandable and he's better in person and class on these topics about the sublime, and all. Bear with the author (Rod) and this review, either skip or skim ahead chapters. Unfortunately, the production values of earlier paper books could not cover the breadth the the art, painting and humanist values in these sections. Skip or skim. Come back (or not) later.
Nash's book is largely chronological and sets up historic context (it's academic, it's got important end notes, and I've run into Rod's history colleagues over the years).
I'm going to skip attempting to summarize the early history for people thinking wilderness in the arts and literature (I think this is a weakness in the book, but not in the literary sense). It's enough to say that people generally feared the natural world: unspoken were the depths of the seas and away from collections of people (cities and towns). That's traditional history. You get that in western civilization class and US history classes and art history classes.
Following the US civil war (and in Europe, the ascent of the Matterhorn), a couple things happened which influenced the change between people and their relationship to the natural world. Here is where the names of various important people came to pass:
Fred Law Olmstead involved with Central Park in NYC (and other Parks) and Yosemite (I must leave lots out).
John Wesley Powell (Civil War Major, lost his arm) descended the Colorado when it was unknown and mapped parts of the Grand Canyon and went on to found the US Geological Survey, "America's first science agency". He witnessed waste, first in war, and later in various land policies (or lack of).
And possibly most important was Gifford Pinchot who because America's first forester and founded the US Forest Service (USFS). I leave out others in this period. Nash linked these guys and the solidified a name: these were utilitarian conservationists or conservationists. Utilitarian is important because it offered a logical reason to challenge the exploitation for the prior time. We got managed forests, soil conservation, etc. Conservationists made sense (but its not like they didn't have opposition at the time).
The problem (one confusion existing to the present) was the semantic meaning for the purpose of conservation: basically to serve humans for as long as possible (we now use the terms sustainably and renewable). This included wild life. This is why Sierra Club and Audubon Society members are confused by hunting organizations like Duck Unlimited. Hunters and fishers are conservationists and do vote, lobby, and pay fees (distinct from taxes: this is why they get incensed at the next group).
A little after the above time Nathaniel P. Langford comes along and visits Yellowstone and the nation gets its first official National Park (State Parks like Adirondack and Yosemite come earlier) in 1872. People began to see forest reserves as places to recreate (Pinchot was OK with this up to a point). Langford, the later Muir, and Mather (one of the first Park Service Directors) saw the Parks and the start toward wilderness as the beginnings of an Aesthetic Preservationist movement or simply Preservationist for short. The key limitation here was the emphasis on visual aesthetics (beauty: which might have been challenging in later National Parks like the Everglades with it's loveable alligators).
You could never have had a Muir or a Mather without Pinchot. Muir thought fishing was boring. 8^) Muir also thought the private car was a great thing for Yosemite. It would only be problematic later (car critics existed during Muir's life: they did see scaling problems, but Muir was too busy politicking (Mather would have better command)).
Throughout the above mostly political change the rest of the American and European world is urbanizing. Art and literature are changing. The literary Transcendentalists (Emerson and Thoreau, but also Rousseau and Ruskin, and many others, and painters and the new "art" of photography were occurring (Moran and Bierstadt).
After aesthetic preservation, world events (WWI and WWII among others) accelerated cracks in thinking. Utilitarian conservation from the Corps of Engineers and problems with industrialization started the beginnings of the modern environmental movement and concern for ecology. The first two groups, conservationists and preservationist, where human-centered (anthropocentric) whereas a newer non-human-centered way of thinking was starting.
Here is where Nash and I both diverge and agree over a couple decade period from the end of WWII and early Vietnam War. Nash places great significance with Aldo Leopold (the book is about wilderness after all, not the history of the environmental movement). I think the rise of science is more important and the more important figure during this period and for me was Rachel Carson publishing Silent Spring, which I read in 1965. The important topics of the 50s and early 60s were the political rise of the Sierra Club and it's Exec. Director Dave Brower with his "Would you flood the Sistine Chapel to get closer to the ceiling?" (a comparison to preserve the Grand Canyon). We needed this badly in 1970. Muir had opposition, too. Read what was said of them.
Subsequent editions starting in 1973 (my first) would cover those events mentioning Colin Fletcher and Paul Simon (the singer) (we saw relevance), and then later editions covered Alaskan wilderness (I've now lost count the time's I've gone to help friends do research up there). For better or worse, the environmental is one which is mostly white, mostly male, and mostly urban. Exceptions are easily cited like Leopold (as a forest ranger, even if somewhat academic), Rachel Carson, and so forth.
I've summarized most of the book for you reading this. Rod does it better. It's not a book about excitement. It's a lesson. Nash integrates bits of the human endeavor. Rod would go on to write other books. The next best which I recommend is The Rights of Nature which was derived from a minority Supreme Court opinion by Justice William O. Douglas termed "The Rights of Rocks." I think this other books, for instance collections of essays don't do Rod justice.
My first attempt to use Rod's book was in his environmental history class, but he took a sabbatical that year, and I experienced a different incredible lecturer in Alfred Runte. Best first class lecture I had in all college. Al's up in the Pacific NW now. I've missed running into him in Yosemite a number of times. It would be the following year that I would have Rod "the God" as a prof. We jointly sponsored a visit by Dave Brower whom I got to know following that. Before the end of his class, he very nicely told me that I was already fully capable of teaching his/our class of 350.
History was not boring. I had started off in 1973 as a nuclear engineering major (the Sierra Club changed its position from pro- anti- just before this time) to work on problems of climate change (it was a topic before now, and even before back then: this is a warning). Rod, for a general education prof, made the topic worth while.
Additional context to Roderick Nash. Rod is a noted river runner/guide in dories and rubber rafts. (Not a kayaker.) He's one of those guys with chiseled looks and a commanding voice like a TV news anchor (all students considered this: for real). Rod was the first man to descend the Tuolumne River (most notably Clavey Falls). In this sense, one of the precursors to extreme river descents. Rod has a coffee table river book, too. A lot of students and others made fun of Rod; he really does know his stuff, and this is likely the longest review I hope to key in. Rod deserves it.