The Malthusian Moment: Global Population Growth and the Birth of American Environmentalism

Paperback Published on: 07/05/2012
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Synopsis

Although Rachel Carson's *Silent Spring* (1962) is often cited as the founding text of the U.S. environmental movement, in *The Malthusian Moment* Thomas Robertson locates the origins of modern American environmentalism in twentieth-century adaptations of Thomas Malthus's concerns about population growth. For many environmentalists, managing population growth became the key to unlocking the most intractable problems facing Americans after World War II-everything from war and the spread of communism overseas to poverty, race riots, and suburban sprawl at home.Weaving together the international and the domestic in creative new ways, *The Malthusian Moment* charts the explosion of Malthusian thinking in the United States from World War I to Earth Day 1970, then traces the just-as-surprising decline in concern beginning in the mid-1970s. In addition to offering an unconventional look at World War II and the Cold War through a balanced study of the environmental movement's most contentious theory, the book sheds new light on some of the big stories of postwar American life: the rise of consumption, the growth of the federal government, urban and suburban problems, the civil rights and women's movements, the role of scientists in a democracy, new attitudes about sex and sexuality, and the emergence of the "New Right."

Publisher information

  • Publisher: Rutgers University Press
  • ISBN: 9780813552729
  • Number of pages: 316
  • Dimensions: 230 x 152 x 23 mm
  • Weight: 478g
  • Languages: English