The Mountains Are Calling: Tourists and the Unmaking of Yosemite National Park: Environment and Region in the American West
Autor Michael W. Childersen Hardback – iul 2026
In seeking to understand how visitors’ perceptions and experiences have shaped their understanding of the purpose of national parks, and nature more broadly, The Mountains Are Calling places visitors at the center of Yosemite’s story. In histories of the national parks, environmental historians traditionally focus on either a conflict between preservation or exploitation, or a celebration of its founders, but such approaches often overlook the millions of visitors or depict them as backdrops in a larger morality play over the preservation of nature. Michael W. Childers instead addresses the lived experiences of visitors and their role in creating national parks, within the context of national park policy shifts and broader American cultural history. Foregrounding the stories of Indigenous people, tourists, innkeepers, soldiers, rangers, climbers, concessioners, and administrators, The Mountains Are Calling tells a more complete story of the park’s past to make sense of tourism’s environmental costs.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781496239587
ISBN-10: 149623958X
Pagini: 286
Ilustrații: 29 photographs, 1 illustration, 3 maps, index
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Editura: Nebraska
Colecția University of Nebraska Press
Seria Environment and Region in the American West
Locul publicării:United States
ISBN-10: 149623958X
Pagini: 286
Ilustrații: 29 photographs, 1 illustration, 3 maps, index
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Editura: Nebraska
Colecția University of Nebraska Press
Seria Environment and Region in the American West
Locul publicării:United States
Notă biografică
Michael W. Childers is an associate professor of history at Colorado State University. He is the author of Colorado Powder Keg: Ski Resorts and the Environmental Movement, winner of the International Ski History Association 2013 Ullr Award.
Cuprins
Introduction
Part One
Chapter One: Making an American Landscape
Chapter Two: Making a National Park
Part Two
Chapter Three: California’s Playground
Chapter Four: Let’s Open the Parks
Part Three
Chapter Five: Yosemite City
Chapter Six: Absolutely Democratic
Epilogue: Granite, Not Gridlock
Part One
Chapter One: Making an American Landscape
Chapter Two: Making a National Park
Part Two
Chapter Three: California’s Playground
Chapter Four: Let’s Open the Parks
Part Three
Chapter Five: Yosemite City
Chapter Six: Absolutely Democratic
Epilogue: Granite, Not Gridlock
Recenzii
“Michael Childers’s excellent book provides a fresh inside-out perspective on the country’s struggles to preserve ‘wilderness’ in Yosemite. Childers shifts the spotlight from national environmental and political leaders to the people of Yosemite, and how they also shaped the region’s destinies—Native precursors, military guardians, poachers, inn holders, concessionaires, resident park personnel, and, of course, floods of diverse visitors with varied goals. This book joins the list of standard works on Yosemite.”—Richard J. Orsi, emeritus professor of history at California State University, East Bay
“We have a lot of Yosemite scholarship, but Michael Childers is correct that we have not paid nearly enough scholarly attention to the visitors. Childers has an eye for setting a scene or a moment by opening with a narration of a person or group arriving in, walking in, or contemplating the park. The visitors in this book help us imagine the park they saw, knew, and experienced. Their stories are more captivating than those of John Muir, Theodore Roosevelt, and Carleton Watkins.”—William Deverell, director of the Huntington–USC Institute on California and the West
“By turning attention to the many different voices and developments that have contributed to Yosemite’s history, Michael Childers offers a much richer, more diverse, and more complicated understanding of Yosemite National Park. Childers excels at uncovering interesting, important, and revealing stories that illuminate the many people and forces that have shaped the park, and in doing so, he invites readers to ponder the wonders of Yosemite and their future anew.”—George Vrtis, coeditor of Mining North America: An Environmental History since 1522
“We have a lot of Yosemite scholarship, but Michael Childers is correct that we have not paid nearly enough scholarly attention to the visitors. Childers has an eye for setting a scene or a moment by opening with a narration of a person or group arriving in, walking in, or contemplating the park. The visitors in this book help us imagine the park they saw, knew, and experienced. Their stories are more captivating than those of John Muir, Theodore Roosevelt, and Carleton Watkins.”—William Deverell, director of the Huntington–USC Institute on California and the West
“By turning attention to the many different voices and developments that have contributed to Yosemite’s history, Michael Childers offers a much richer, more diverse, and more complicated understanding of Yosemite National Park. Childers excels at uncovering interesting, important, and revealing stories that illuminate the many people and forces that have shaped the park, and in doing so, he invites readers to ponder the wonders of Yosemite and their future anew.”—George Vrtis, coeditor of Mining North America: An Environmental History since 1522
Descriere
The Mountains Are Calling recounts the history of Yosemite National Park through the perspective of it visitors while assessing the environmental consequences of its popularity.