Review, 1 pg.
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Kirkus Reviews
DEEP
AGROECOLOGY
Farms, Food, and Our Future
by Steven McFadden
Pub Date: Sept. 13th, 2019
ISBN:-
Publisher: Self
Journalist McFadden (Classical Considerations,
2018, etc.) examines the state of current American
farming methods and presents “deep agroecology”
as the answer to a broken food system.
The way that most of the country approaches farming is not sustainable,
according to the author; widespread pesticide use, genetically engineered
seeds, and factory farms all contribute to the rapid loss of valuable topsoil
and to fragile ecosystems. And with a worldwide epidemic of pollution
contributing to climate change, he notes, the state of our food system is
more precarious than ever. Enter deep agroecology, a revolutionary
approach to farming and food that, the author asserts, has the potential to
heal the planet before it’s too late. He defines it as an approach to farming
and food that is “clean, sustainable, humane, egalitarian, and just, rooted
in ecology, other sciences, and indigenous knowledge.” In this book, he
hopes to present a general overview of his concept while also offering
concrete examples of deep agroecology in action. He does so in several
ways, including discussions of the history of agrarian idealism, and
detailed reports and statistics on the damage done by modern farming and
explanations of how it came to be the dominant form of production.
Because deep agroecology draws on a combination of science and ancient
wisdom, it also highlights how many indigenous cultures have, for
centuries, recognized the importance of strong, healthy communities, and
how they’re dependent on the planet on which they live. Overall,
McFadden puts forth a convincing case that farms are the basis of
civilization, and that if humanity is to survive, it must pursue different
principles and a new philosophy. McFadden is an independent journalist
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who’s authored several books on a range of subjects, and his prose is
always clear and easy to understand. Although he covers a lot of material,
he does so successfully by consistently returning to familiar themes and
arguments, as when he repeatedly points out how most people lack a
spiritual connection with the planet, which has had a profound impact on
their awareness of environmental problems.
An enlightening work of ecological thought.
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