The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

Barnes and Noble

Loading Inventory...
At Home the World: California Women and Postwar Environmental Movement

At Home the World: California Women and Postwar Environmental Movement in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $21.95
Get it at Barnes and Noble
At Home the World: California Women and Postwar Environmental Movement

At Home the World: California Women and Postwar Environmental Movement in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $21.95
Loading Inventory...

Size: Paperback

Get it at Barnes and Noble
From the beginning of California's statehood, adventurers, scientists, and writers reveled in its majestic landscape. Some were women, though few garnered attention or invitations to join the Sierra Club, the organization created in 1892 to preserve wilderness. Over the next sixty years the Sierra Club and other groups gained prestige and members--including an increasing number of women. But these organizations were not equipped to confront the massive growth of industry that overtook postwar California. This era needed a new approach, and it came from an unlikely source: white, middle-class housewives with no experience in politics. These women successfully battled smog, nuclear power plants, piles of garbage in the San Francisco Bay, and over-building in the Santa Monica Mountains.
In
At Home in the World
Cairns shows how women were at the center of a broader and more inclusive environmental movement that looked beyond wilderness to focus on people's daily life. These women challenged the approach long promoted by establishment groups and laid the foundation for the modern environmental movement.
Kathleen A. Cairns
is a retired lecturer in history and women's studies at California Polytechnic University-San Luis Obispo. She is the author of
The Enigma Woman: The Death Sentence of Nellie May Madison
(Nebraska, 2007) and
The Case of Rose Bird: Gender, Politics, and the California Courts
(Nebraska, 2016), among other books.
From the beginning of California's statehood, adventurers, scientists, and writers reveled in its majestic landscape. Some were women, though few garnered attention or invitations to join the Sierra Club, the organization created in 1892 to preserve wilderness. Over the next sixty years the Sierra Club and other groups gained prestige and members--including an increasing number of women. But these organizations were not equipped to confront the massive growth of industry that overtook postwar California. This era needed a new approach, and it came from an unlikely source: white, middle-class housewives with no experience in politics. These women successfully battled smog, nuclear power plants, piles of garbage in the San Francisco Bay, and over-building in the Santa Monica Mountains.
In
At Home in the World
Cairns shows how women were at the center of a broader and more inclusive environmental movement that looked beyond wilderness to focus on people's daily life. These women challenged the approach long promoted by establishment groups and laid the foundation for the modern environmental movement.
Kathleen A. Cairns
is a retired lecturer in history and women's studies at California Polytechnic University-San Luis Obispo. She is the author of
The Enigma Woman: The Death Sentence of Nellie May Madison
(Nebraska, 2007) and
The Case of Rose Bird: Gender, Politics, and the California Courts
(Nebraska, 2016), among other books.

Find at Mall of America® in Bloomington, MN

Visit at Mall of America® in Bloomington, MN
Powered by Adeptmind