Black Faces, White Spaces
Reimagining the Relationship of African Americans to the Great Outdoors
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
Starred review from June 1, 2014
In six well-crafted chapters, with extensive endnotes, Finney (Univ. of California at Berkeley) presents the myriad circumstances inhibiting many African Americans' engagement with the natural world and pursuant environmental movements. By examining the complexities from historic, societal, and personal perspectives, the author illuminates the causes and nature of barriers to this community's environmental engagement. The text begins with a look into land access granted to specific groups of immigrants as juxtaposed against the experience of freed slaves, then travels through history to the formation of an environmental movement during a time when African Americans were denied basic human rights of property and person. Also, while the Wilderness and the Civil Rights Acts were both passed in 1964, the former failed to consider the cultural implications of the latter. Through additionally analyzing the theoretical constructs of signifiers that grant Americans "place" in the natural environment, Finney makes a clear case for the dominant culture's habitual (though, sometimes unwitting) rejection of African Americans. This is reinforced by sound research with both objects (national publications) and subjects (human participants). Finney's discussion includes sensitive treatment of questions of "authenticity" within the African American community and how environmental, or nature-based behaviors do or do not fit in with these mores. The book ends on a somewhat more positive note, suggesting that since the author's research began nearly ten years ago, the movement to allow room for all citizens at spaces of natural splendor is beginning to take root. VERDICT Highly recommended: for those interested in environmental studies, interdisciplinary studies, and civil rights.--Jewell Anderson, Savannah Country Day Sch. Lib., GA
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