ABSTRACT

This book explores the role of the ideology of nature in producing urban and exurban sprawl. It examines the ironies of residential development on the metropolitan fringe, where the search for “nature” brings residents deeper into the world from which they are imagining their escape—of Federal Express, technologically mediated communications, global supply chains, and the anonymity of the global marketplace—and where many of the central features of exurbia—very low-density residential land use, monster homes, and conversion of forested or rural land for housing—contribute to the very problems that the social and environmental aesthetic of exurbia attempts to avoid. The volume shows how this contradiction—to live in the green landscape, and to protect the green landscape from urbanization—gets caught up and represented in the ideology of nature, and how this ideology, in turn, constitutes and is constituted by the landscapes being urbanized.

chapter 1|30 pages

Introduction

Sprawl and the Ideology of Nature

chapter 2|28 pages

Bridges in the Cultural Landscape

Crossing Nature in Exurbia

chapter 3|19 pages

Exurbia Meets Nature

Environmental Ideals for a Rootless Society 1

chapter 4|16 pages

Airworld, the Genius Lociof Exurbia

chapter 5|27 pages

Rewilding Walden Woods and Reworking Exurban Woodlands

Higher Uses in Thoreau Country

chapter 6|38 pages

Sojourning in Nature

The Second-Home Exurban Landscapes of Ontario's Near North

chapter 8|33 pages

Time, Place, and Structure

Typo-Morphological Analysis of Three Calgary Neighborhoods

chapter 9|34 pages

The Imagined Landscape

Language, Metaphor, and the Environmental Movement

chapter 10|43 pages

The Mortality of Trees in Exurbia's Pastoral Modernity

Challenging Conservation Practices to Move beyond Deferring Dialogue about the Meanings and Values of Environments

chapter |4 pages

Editors' Epilogue

An Agenda for Addressing Green Sprawl