Summary
In a time when our relationship to the natural world is ruled by the violence and greed of unbridled consumerism, Wendell Berry speaks out in these prescient essays, drawn from his fifty-year campaign on behalf of American lands and communities. Full description
- A native hill
- (1968)
- The making of a marginal farm
- (1980)
- Think little
- (1970)
- Nature as measure
- (1989)
- The total economy
- (2000)
- Writer and region
- (1987)
- Damage
- (1974)
- The work of local culture
- (1988)
- The unsettling of America
- (1977)
- The agrarian standard
- (2002)
- The pleasures of eating
- (1989)
- Horse-drawn tools and the doctrine of labor saving
- (1978)
- Getting along with nature
- (1982)
- A few words for motherhood
- (1980)
- Two minds
- (2002)
- The prejudice against country people
- (2001)
- Faustian economics
- (2006)
- Quantity versus form
- (2004)
- Word and flesh
- (1989)
- Why I am not going to buy a computer
- (1987)
- Feminism, the body, and the machine
- (1989)
- Family work
- (1980)
- Rugged individualism
- (2004)
- Economy and pleasure
- (1988)
- In distrust of movements
- (1998)
- In defense of literacy
- (1970)
- Some thoughts on citizenship and conscience in honor of Dan Pratt
- (1968)
- Compromise, Hell!
- (2994)
- The way of ignorance
- (2004)
- The future of agriculture
- (2011)
- The rise
- (1969).