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The Nature Study Movement: The Forgotten Popularizer of America's Conservation Ethic

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Beginning in the late nineteenth century, thousands of Americans turned to an unexpected pastime that had been theirs to take up all the study of nature. Armed with cameras and collecting jars, everyday citizens wandered the country's forests, prairies, and mountains to gain an appreciation of local flora and fauna and to escape the increasingly industrialized world as well.

Kevin Armitage presents the first comprehensive history of the nature study movement, demonstrating its significance to American environmental thought and politics. He shows how nature study, as both a pedagogic and popular idea, has had a lasting effect on American culture and society, and his reevaluation of the movement has much to tell us about the American relationship with the nonhuman world.

Armitage explains that the ways in which nature study advocates tried to reconcile science with spirit were surprising, incomplete, and sometimes contradictory. As Progressive Era Americans embraced scientific modernity, they became increasingly uneasy about the dispassionate character of social and economic life, turning to nature for unmediated experiences that might enhance the joy of living. By examining the complex ways American culture struggled with science and its application to the natural world, Armitage shows how the development of nature study reflected the social dynamics of an emerging industrial society—and exerted a decisive influence on some of the great conservationists of the twentieth century, including Aldo Leopold and Rachel Carson, both of whom were encouraged to study nature at an early age.

Armitage reveals how nature study advocates, notably progressive educators, devoted themselves to inculcating an appreciation of nature among children through direct contact with the natural world. Indeed, by 1907 "Nature Study" had been incorporated into a great many school curricula. He also tells how educators like John Dewey and Booker T. Washington contributed to conservationist thought and includes biographical sketches of some of the major, if often overlooked, nature study Anna Botsford Comstock, Ernest Thompson Seton, Mabel Osgood Wright, Gene Stratton Porter, and Liberty Hyde Bailey.

The nature study movement left a rich legacy that has been too long overlooked. Armitage shows that the personal study of nature remains central to modern environmentalism-and that in nature study one finds much that is universal to modern America.

302 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2009

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Kevin C. Armitage

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for reagan ♡.
54 reviews15 followers
April 19, 2021
I read this book for a background on the nature study movement and how it corresponded with The Conservation Movement...

It's an alright book. I think my rating would be 3.5 stars.

There is a focus on rural and urban children; however, it only really focuses on white people rather than people of any other race or nationality.

It also appears to repeat the same thing over and over and over, but I guess that means the message stuck with me. I dunno.

I would have never read this on my own. Also, the author is not a great person.

Maybe this book does not deserve 4 stars... anyways...

I have a book review to write on this for class now.
Profile Image for Hope.
70 reviews37 followers
May 27, 2020
This was a very academic look at the history of integrating an appreciation of nature and ecology into the American education system. It was enlightening in ways to see how things developed over time, but at other times it was far too technical.

If I never see the word 'pedagogy' again I will be very happy.
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