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But if you know where to look, you can uncover a different history, one of vibrant resistance, one that's been mostly forgotten. This Radical Land recovers that story. Daegan Miller is our guide on a beautifully written, revelatory trip across the continent during which we encounter radical thinkers, settlers, and artists who grounded their ideas of freedom, justice, and progress in the very landscapes around them, even as the runaway engine of capitalism sought to steamroll everything in its path. Here we meet Thoreau, the expert surveyor, drawing anticapitalist property maps. We visit a black antislavery community in the Adirondack wilderness of upstate New York. We discover how seemingly commercial photographs of the transcontinental railroad secretly sent subversive messages, and how a band of utopian anarchists among California's sequoias imagined a greener, freer future. At every turn, everyday radicals looked to landscape for the language of their dissent--drawing crucial early links between the environment and social justice, links we're still struggling to strengthen today.
Working in a tradition that stretches from Thoreau to Rebecca Solnit, Miller offers nothing less than a new way of seeing the American past--and of understanding what it can offer us for the present . . . and the future.
All stories have a beginning; mine has its roots somewhere in the farm fields and woods of my book-filled childhood home in rural upstate New York, where, in the fifth grade, I discovered Walden on the shelves of our local one-room library. That was it—I’ve been chasing words and ideas ever since.
I chased them into the academy (I earned my MA and PhD in history from Cornell University; afterwards, I was an A.W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin-Madison); and, when the walls of the Ivory Tower proved too restrictive, back out again.
I write about all sorts of things—from fatherhood and cancer to monkey wrenches and trees and photography. My first book, This Radical Land: A Natural History of American Dissent, was published in 2018 by the University of Chicago Press. Ultimately my thoughts always return to the hold the past has on the present and the way that we shape both to fit the world we want to inhabit.
I’d like that world to be green, healthy, just, and free, for me as well as for you.
I live in the woods, in a small hilltown of Western Massachusetts, with my wife, two perfect, feral boys, and a roost-ruling cat.
Source: daeganmiller.com
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