On a misty morning in eastern Kentucky, cross-bearing Christians
gather for a service on a surface-mined mountain. They pray for the
health and renewal of the land and for their communities, lamenting
the corporate greed of the mining companies. On another day, in
southern West Virginia, Andrew Jordon hosts Bible study in a small
cabin overlooking a disused 1,400-acre surface mine. He believes his
efforts to reclaim sites like these represent responsible
environmental stewardship. In Sacred Mountains, Andrew R. H. Thompson
highlights scenes such as these in order to propose a Christian
ethical analysis of the controversial mining practice that has
increasingly divided the nation and has often led to fierce and even
violent confrontations. Thompson draws from the arguments of H.
Richard Niebuhr, whose work establishes an ideal foundation for
understanding Appalachia. Thompson provides a thorough introduction to
the issues surrounding surface mining, including the environmental
consequences and the resultant religious debates, and highlights the
discussions being carried out in the media and by scholarly works. He
also considers five popular perspectives (ecofeminism, liberation
theology, environmental justice, environmental pragmatism, and
political ecology) and offers his own framework and guidelines for
moral engagement with the subject. Thompson's arguments add to the
work of other ethicists and theologians by examining the implications
of culture in a variety of social, historical, and religious contexts.
A groundbreaking and nuanced study that looks past the traditionally
conflicting stereotypes about religion and environmental consciousness
in Appalachia, Sacred Mountains offers a new approach that unifies all
communities, regardless of their beliefs.
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A Christian Ethical Approach to Mountaintop Removal
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780813166001
Publisert
2015
Utgiver
University Press of Kentucky
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter