- Title Pages
- The Drama of Possibility
- Acknowledgments
- Dedication
- Introduction: Reading Mcdermott
- Prelude: Remarks Upon Receiving the 2004 Presidential Teaching Award
- Prescript
- Poem: Roots/Edges
-
Chapter One Threadbare Crape -
Chapter Two An American Angle of vision, Part 1 -
Chapter Three An American Angle of Vision, Part 2 -
Chapter Four Spires of Influence -
Chapter Five Josiah Royce's Philosophy of the Community -
Chapter Six Possibility or Else! - Poem: The Professional Tin Cup
-
Chapter Seven A Relational World -
Chapter Eight Nature Nostalgia and the City -
Chapter Nine Space, Time, and Touch -
Chapter Ten Glass Without Feet - Poem: Waiting
-
Chapter Eleven Why Bother -
Chapter Twelve: Ill-at-Ease -
Chapter Thirteen “Turning” Backward -
Chapter Fourteen The Inevitability of Our Own Death -
Chapter Fifteen Isolation as Starvation - Poem: Deadlines
-
Chapter Sixteen Hast any Philosophy in Thee, Shepherd? -
Chapter Seventeen The Cultural Immortality of Philosophy as Human Drama -
Chapter Eighteen To Be Human is To Humanize -
Chapter Nineteen Experience Grows by its Edges -
Chapter Twenty The Aesthetic Drama of the Ordinary - Poem: Lurking
-
Chapter Twenty-One The Gamble for Excellence -
Chapter Twenty-Two Liberty and Order in the Educational Anthropology of Maria Montessori -
Chapter Twenty-Three The Erosion of Face-to-Face Pedagogy -
Chapter Twenty-Four Cultural Literacy -
Chapter Twenty-Five Trumping Cynicism with Imagination - Finis
- Index
Nature Nostalgia and the City
Nature Nostalgia and the City
An American Dilemma
- Chapter:
- (p.167) Chapter Eight Nature Nostalgia and the City
- Source:
- The Drama of Possibility
- Author(s):
John J. McDermott
- Publisher:
- Fordham University Press
This chapter presents an essay on the generalizations about American culture and nature nostalgia. It proposes the generalization that the American urban man has been seduced by nature. This means that the urban man, at his deepest level of consciousness, functions on behalf of nature metaphors, nature expectancies, and nostalgia for an experience of nature. This situation has significant implications for contemporary philosophy. One is that Americans are blocked from understanding the dramatic and necessary conflict with nature and the other is the failure to recognize the limitations and strengths of the present urban context on its own terms, rather than as a function of the absence of nature.
Keywords: American culture, nature, nostalgia, urban man, essay
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- Title Pages
- The Drama of Possibility
- Acknowledgments
- Dedication
- Introduction: Reading Mcdermott
- Prelude: Remarks Upon Receiving the 2004 Presidential Teaching Award
- Prescript
- Poem: Roots/Edges
-
Chapter One Threadbare Crape -
Chapter Two An American Angle of vision, Part 1 -
Chapter Three An American Angle of Vision, Part 2 -
Chapter Four Spires of Influence -
Chapter Five Josiah Royce's Philosophy of the Community -
Chapter Six Possibility or Else! - Poem: The Professional Tin Cup
-
Chapter Seven A Relational World -
Chapter Eight Nature Nostalgia and the City -
Chapter Nine Space, Time, and Touch -
Chapter Ten Glass Without Feet - Poem: Waiting
-
Chapter Eleven Why Bother -
Chapter Twelve: Ill-at-Ease -
Chapter Thirteen “Turning” Backward -
Chapter Fourteen The Inevitability of Our Own Death -
Chapter Fifteen Isolation as Starvation - Poem: Deadlines
-
Chapter Sixteen Hast any Philosophy in Thee, Shepherd? -
Chapter Seventeen The Cultural Immortality of Philosophy as Human Drama -
Chapter Eighteen To Be Human is To Humanize -
Chapter Nineteen Experience Grows by its Edges -
Chapter Twenty The Aesthetic Drama of the Ordinary - Poem: Lurking
-
Chapter Twenty-One The Gamble for Excellence -
Chapter Twenty-Two Liberty and Order in the Educational Anthropology of Maria Montessori -
Chapter Twenty-Three The Erosion of Face-to-Face Pedagogy -
Chapter Twenty-Four Cultural Literacy -
Chapter Twenty-Five Trumping Cynicism with Imagination - Finis
- Index