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Publications about dismantling civilization and going feral
I'm writing these words out of doors. It's a warm spring afternoon and I sit on a log under a big old cottonwood, soft earth under my feet, in one of those urban places that pass for wild, a copse hidden to humans except for wide-ranging children and adults who know they need whatever wildness it provides. * Cardinals and chickadees sing nearby. A crow silently lands on a branch. A red squirrel scolds from on high, then comes closer and plays hide-and-seek from behind a trunk. Despite the hum of a highway nearby, I feel saner than I have all day. "In wildness is the preservation of the world," Thoreau foretold. A century and a half later, as humans' and other species' footing on the planet seems ever more precarious, a number of people think, write, and-more importantly-act in accord with this vision, having heeded the lessons of places such as this, a plot of land they know and love.
Derrick Jensen's new two-volume Endgame (Seven Stories Press), dedicated to Shawnee organizer/resister Tecumseh, forcefully, lovingly, despairingly, and tirelessly describes in volume one, The Problem of Civilization, how human civilization-with its global capitalism, plutocracy, and oil-based economy-is destroying planet Earth and examines in volume two, Resistance, what's to be done to take down civilization and live sustainably. Militant and provocative, Jensen looks at systems of exploitation from many angles and criticizes those who fail to act or refuse even to consider the questions "What if those in power are murderous?" and "What if they're not willing to listen to reason?" Jensen's assertive, aphoristic style demands reader response. ("A primary purpose of the police is to enforce the delusions of those with lots of pieces of green paper," he writes.) Doing his best to speak for salmon and...