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It's a Matter of Survival [Paperback]

Anita Gordon (Author), David Suzuki (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

February 1, 1992 0674469712 978-0674469716

"The greenhouse effect is us, and it is specifically us in the Western world" This is one of the messages at the beginning of Anita Gordon and David Suzuki's startling view of our future on Earth. More than any other time in history, the 1990s have marked a turning point for human civilization. Not only are we facing ecological disasters that will affect our ability to survive, but the crisis is forcing us to reexamine the entire value system that has governed our lives for the past two thousand years.

Anita Gordon and Suzuki warn us of the transition we will need to make if we are to arrive safely in the next century. More than a book on the environment, this is a book about us as a species: our shortsightedness, our failure to read the warnings, our inability to grasp the significance of our actions-and the tough decisions we have to make in order to save ourselves.

The power of the book lies in the consensus of the many voices, those of scientists and other scholars, that speak through it. The components of our predicament--global warming, soil erosion, acid rain, species depletion, ozone damage, rainforest destruction, overpopulation--are quantified with authority. And never before has such a strong consensus been expressed in a single warning. The message we receive is that our actions are taking place in a political and economic world that demands radical change.

In an effort to counteract this blueprint for disaster, Gordon and Suzuki present a resounding rebuttal of technological optimism and the belief that continued economic growth is a prerequisite for environmental reform. The intellectual fog of sustainable development is incisively dispelled, and in its place the authors suggest practical contributions that individuals as well as governments can make toward creating a "conserver society."


Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

With this book, Mitchell, who is Senate Majority Leader and Chairman of the Committee on Environmental Protection, establishes himself as one of the leading environmentalists in Congress. In the first part, "Into the Greenhouse Century," he examines the major ecological crises confronting the world, including acid rain, the greenhouse effect, overpopulation, and tropical forest destruction. In the second half, "Saving the Planet," he details the steps that must be taken to avoid the worst effects of the current environmental damage. This is a highly readable, disturbing, yet ultimately hopeful book. Much grimmer in tone than Mitchell, Suzuki and Gordon paint a picture of a world almost beyond recovery. They cover much the same ground as Mitchell, quoting many of the same experts, but their solutions are much more radical. They advocate strict controls on automobile use, restrictions on all carbon-based fuels, and stringent limits on population growth. Well written, cogent, and tightly argued, this book presents a convincing case for radical environmental reform. Both volumes are recommended for environmental collections.
- Randy Dykhuis, OCLC, Dublin, Ohio
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

Suzuki's new book, It's a Matter of Survival, co-written with Anita Gordon, is quite simply a call to arms in the eco-wars. Their premise: We may have as few as ten years left to ensure the planet's ecological survival.
--Gary Dunford (Toronto Sun )

It's a Matter of Survival is the best piece of extended environmental journalism I've seen to date. Few specialists--the 'experts,'' myself included--would have tried for this much-needed panoramic view. It is an excellent book.
--E. O. Wilson

Product Details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press (February 1, 1992)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0674469712
  • ISBN-13: 978-0674469716
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 5.8 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,296,709 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A call to action: areview of "It's a matter of survival", September 4, 2010
By 
William P. Palmer (Brighton, Victoria, Australia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: It's a Matter of Survival (Paperback)
The book proclaims that it is a call to action. Its message is simply that we all have to discard old ideas such as "nature is infinite" or that "science and technology will solve our problems". All human societies are enjoined to work together for the good of the planet communally and to chart a new course to save the planet from a certain destruction in fifty years' time.

The earliest chapters paint a stark picture of the life that our children and grandchildren will lead in the year 2040. The pattern of the remainder of the book is to dispose of six sacred truths of traditional thought which are seen to be about the planet's ability to cope with pollution, the problem of human population, the human species' domination of other species, the acceptance of industrialisation as the price of progress, the concept of continuing economic growth and the effects of pollution.

The authors of the book remain optimistic in spite of the horrific picture they have painted and in the last two chapters give a plan of action for preventing global calamity. That is the scenario: numerous books, magazines, radio and television programs provide similar information. I did not note any major new concepts which anyone who is at least half awake has not met many times before. The book is easy to read but in my view in badly written. The journalistic style is irritating with quotations from this or that source placed in snug, uniform word-processed paragraphs that are not fully connected or integrated with each other.

As an example, Chapter 7 introduces Herman Daly by name half a dozen times in different guises. On page 161 he is presented in the following terms: "World Bank senior economist Herman Daly holds a minority view when it comes to economic thinking." On page 169 he is introduced as co-author of "For the Common Good", whist on page 169/170 he is cited as the "maverick economist, Herman Daly". On page 170 again his views are described as "heretical". I have not personally heard of Herman Daly, so I looked in the well referenced section at the rear of the book on notes and sources which cite from Daly's total oeuvre, one article, one conference paper, one radio program and two personal communications. Daly may well have written in more erudite journals than those cited, but the book seems to prefer pseudo-academic respectability to real scholarship.

In other words, don't look to this book to give a balanced set of views on the subject. Comparatively minor authors and thinkers are quoted extensively to bolster their reputation where they express an environmental viewpoint. Those who disagree with this viewpoint get a brief quotation of their views that are demolished as "straw-men" over the next few pages.

Overall, this book is not particularly memorable, or well written and does not break much new ground, but its sincerity and conviction do in the end come through and the authors' worst case scenario is horrific enough to be worth consideration at some point in our crowded school curricula.

Originally written for "ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION AND INFORATION Volume 11, Number 2 (1992, p. 123"
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