Gratitude for the Wild: Christian Ethics in the Wilderness
By (Author) Nathaniel Van Yperen
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
17th June 2019
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Religious ethics
Conservation of the environment
Literature: history and criticism
Nature and the natural world: general interest
241.691
Hardback
130
Width 160mm, Height 231mm, Spine 16mm
367g
Since the passage of the Wilderness Act of 1964, a hotly contested debate over the value of wilderness reveals cultural anxieties about an American society that has spurned limits. Gratitude for the Wild explores how the wild known in wilderness raises our tolerance for mystery in the recognition of our limits and in the celebration of a God-loved world that exceeds our grasping. The idea of wilderness introduces questions about the balance between utility and appreciation, and between enjoyment and restraint. Wilderness is a nexus of competing and contested accounts of responsibility. In conversation with the work of Doug Peacock, Terry Tempest Williams, James Gustafson, and Martin Luther King Jr., Nathaniel Van Yperen offers an original argument for how wilderness can evoke a vision of a good life in which creaturely limits are accepted in gratitude, even in the face of ambiguity and mystery. Through the theme of gratitude, the book refocuses attention on the role of affection and testimony in ecological ethics and Christian ethics.
Nathaniel Van Yperen offers us a beautifully conceived and eloquently written account of the spiritual importance of wildernessits propensity to teach us about the nature of things: its potential to realign our most important loyalties and loves; and its overwhelming power to place us in proximity to the very mystery of our being.Van Yperen moves nimbly within the classical canon of environmental and wilderness ethics (e.g. Thoreau, Muir, Aldo Leopold, Rachel Carson, Annie Dillard, Wendell Berry, etc.) providing the reader a matchless introduction to a topic of vital importance to our common future.This is a work of great depth and maturity.It deserves a wide audience. -- William Stacy Johnson, Arthur M. Adams Professor of Theology, Princeton Theological Seminary
Nathaniel Van Yperen offers us a beautifully conceived and eloquently written account of the spiritual importance of wildernessits propensity to teach us about the nature of things: its potential to realign our most important loyalties and loves; and its overwhelming power to place us in proximity to the very mystery of our being.Van Yperen moves nimbly within the classical canon of environmental and wilderness ethics (e.g. Thoreau, Muir, Aldo Leopold, Rachel Carson, Annie Dillard, Wendell Berry, etc.) providing the reader a matchless introduction to a topic of vital importance to our common future. This is a work of great depth and maturity It deserves a wide audience. -- William Stacy Johnson, Arthur M. Adams Professor of Theology, Princeton Theological Seminary
Nathaniel Van Yperen is visiting assistant professor of religion at Gustavus Adolphus College.