NATURE WRITING

(Redirected from Nature Writing)
'Nature writing' is traditionally defined as nonfiction prose writing about the natural environment. Nature writing often draws heavily on scientific information and facts about the natural world; at the same time, it is frequently written in the first person and incorporates personal observations of and philosophical reflections upon nature.
In ''This Incomperable Lande: A Book of American Nature Writing'', Thomas Lyon suggests that nature writing encompasses a spectrum of different types of works, ranging from those that place primary emphasis on natural history facts (such as field guides) to those in which philosophical interpretations predominate. Some of the subcategories he identifies include natural history essays, rambles, essays of solitude or escape, and travel and adventure writing.
Modern nature writing traces its roots to the works of natural history that were popular in the second half of the 18th century and throughout the 19th, including works by Gilbert White, William Bartram, John James Audubon, Charles Darwin, and other explorers, collectors, and naturalists. Henry David Thoreau is often considered the father of modern American nature writing. Other canonical figures in the genre include Ralph Waldo Emerson, John Muir, Aldo Leopold, Rachel Carson, and Edward Abbey (although he rejected the term for himself).

Contents
List of contemporary American nature writers
Resources
References

List of contemporary American nature writers



Rick Bass

Wendell Berry

Christopher Camuto

Annie Dillard

Gretel Ehrlich

John Elder

Bernd Heinrich

Sue Hubbell

Don L. Johnson

William Kittredge

Barry Lopez

Bill McKibben

John McPhee

Sy Montgomery

Gary Paul Nabhan

Richard Nelson

Sam Pickering

Michael Pollan

Richard Proenneke

Robert Michael Pyle

David Quammen

Janisse Ray

Scott Russell Sanders

Gary Snyder

John Tallmadge

Edwin Way Teale

Terry Tempest Williams

Robert Winkler

Resources



Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE)

Graduate Programs in Nature Writing and Ecocriticism Literature

Sitka Symposium

Whole Terrain: Resources for Writers

Whole Terrain, journal of "reflective environmental practice"

References



★ Finch, Robert, and John Elder, eds. ''The Norton Book of Nature Writing''. New York: Norton, 1990.

★ Lyon, Thomas J., ed. ''This Incomperable Lande: A Book of American Nature Writing''. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1989.

★ Price, Jenny. Writers' Block. ''Conservation'' 8(2). "Earnest, pious, and quite allergic to irony: nature writing has none of the trademark qualities that play well in 2007. So is it time for a change?"

★ Stewart, Frank, ''A Natural History of Nature Writing''. Washington, D.C.: Island Press, 1994.

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