Acknowledgements / List of Figures / 1. Introduction: Environmental Aesthetics Between Nature and Culture / 2. Gardens I: The Picturesque and Engagement with Nature / 3. Gardens II: Ethics, Aesthetics, and Topiary / 4. Agricultural Landscapes / 5. Environmental, Land, and Ecological Art / 6. Ecological Restoration / 7. Conclusion: Aesthetics and Ethics Between Nature and Culture / Bibliography / Index
Emily Brady is Professor of Philosophy and Director of Glasscock
Center for Humanities Research at Texas A&M University. She
works in the areas of aesthetics and philosophy of art,
environmental ethics, environmental humanities, and animal studies.
She has published widely in aesthetics and environmental
philosophy, and her most recent book is The Sublime in Modern
Philosophy: Aesthetics, Ethics and Nature (Cambridge University
Press, 2013).
Dr Isis Brook is Head of Faculty and Senior Lecturer at Crossfields
Institute International. She has held philosophy lectureships at
Lancaster University, where she also served as a Faculty Teaching
Dean, and the University of Central Lancashire. Her research and
publications range across aesthetics, environmental ethics, and
phenomenology. She is especially interested in responses to gardens
and landscapes, and how these responses can be made more sensitive
and ultimately shape who we are.
Dr Jonathan Prior is Lecturer in Human Geography at Cardiff
University. His research and publications take an interdisciplinary
approach, spanning environmental philosophy, sound studies, and
landscape research. He is interested in the relationship between
environmental values and the production of environmental policies,
as a means to understand what motivates and underpins different
ways of conceptualising the more-than-human world when humans seek
to implement conservation, ecological restoration, or environmental
management strategies.
A welcome collaborative effort that examines both mainstream and
quirky instances of modified natural environments, proposes proper
modes of aesthetic appreciation for such sites, and urges an
ethical stewardship that foregrounds caring for the natural world
we inhabit.
*Stephanie Ross, Professor of Philosophy, University of Missouri,
St Louis*
Until recently, environmental aesthetics was preoccupied with wild
or ‘unmodified’ nature. Since the environments we engage with most
– like gardens and farmland – are decisively modified by cultural
practices, a book on the aesthetics of such environments is
especially welcome. The authors provide clear, informed and closely
argued discussions of topics that range from topiary and
monocultural farming to landscape restoration and environmental
art. Their book will surely help to widen the horizons of
environmental aesthetics.
*David E. Cooper, Emeritus Professor, Department of Philosophy,
Durham University*
Between Nature and Culture: The Aesthetics of Modified Environments
is a masterpiece. Clear and well-expressed, the book’s philosophy
is optimistic and admirable, and reminds me of the early writings
of transcendentalists such as Henry David Thoreau.
*Jai Syvitski, Professor, Department of Geological Sciences,
University of Colorado Boulder*
This timely and carefully-argued book addresses the various ways
that aesthetic value can be created by working with nature. In so
doing, it sheds new light on the aesthetic and ethical significance
of a wide range of practices, from topiary to stonewalling and from
land art to the restoration of post-industrial landscapes. I highly
recommend it.
*Simon Paul James, Reader in Philosophy at Durham University;
Member of Durham Centre for Ethics and Law in the Life
Sciences*
In contrast to much of the major work in environmental aesthetics,
Between Nature and Culture focuses on the aesthetic potential of
modified environments, such as gardens and agricultural landscapes,
where the land is intentionally modified to suit human needs and
purposes. The book is an excellent introduction to this important
area of research as well as a deep discussion of its major themes.
It will be an essential source for scholars and a fascinating read
for anyone interested in the aesthetic appreciation of the
environments in which, as the authors note, most of us spend most
of our lives.
*Allen Carlson, Professor Emeritus, Department of Philosophy,
University of Alberta*
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