Fr. 53.50

Playa Works - The Myth of the Empty

English · Hardback

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Description

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Writer-poet William L. Fox has spent much of his career contemplating the complex ways that landscape, human cognition, and history collide to create our perceptions and treatment of place. In Playa Works, Fox considers the West's emptiest spaces -- the playas, or dry beds, of the ancient lakes that once filled much of the Great Basin. Among the flattest, most barren places on the planet, the West's playas have haunted the American imagination since the Fremont expedition first surveyed them in the early nineteenth century.In these eight brilliant essays, Fox explores many of the major playas of the American West, examining locations as diverse as Nellis Air Force Base and Frenchman Flat, where the federal government has tested experimental aircraft and atomic weaponry; the Great Salt Lake Desert, where landspeed records have been broken; and the Black Rock Desert of Northern Nevada, site of the colorful Burning Man arts festival. He analyzes the geological and climatological conditions that created the playas and the historical role that playas played in the exploration and settlement of the West. And he offers lucid and keenly perceptive discussions of the ways that artists have responded to the playas, from the ancient makers of geoglyphs to the work of contemporary artists who have found inspiration in these enigmatic spaces, including earthworks builder Michael Heizer, photographer Richard Misrach, and painter Michael Moore. The ensemble is a compelling combination of natural history, philosophy, and art criticism, a thoughtful meditation on humankind's aversion to and fascination with the void.In Playa Works, Fox's passion for the American West combines with his scholar'scuriosity and power of analysis to produce one of the most engaging discussions yet of the natural phenomena that we call playas. This is nature writing at its best -- provocative, profound, richly intelligent, and delightfully adventurous.

About the author

Summary

In the eight essays collected here, William L. Fox considers the American West's emptiest spaces - the playas, or dry beds, of the lakes that once filled much of the Great Basin. Combining natural history, philosophy and art criticism, he meditates on our aversion to and fascination with the void.

Product details

Authors William L Fox, William L. Fox
Publisher University of Nevada Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 30.08.2002
 
EAN 9780874175233
ISBN 978-0-87417-523-3
Dimensions 161 mm x 222 mm x 19 mm
Weight 448 g
Illustrations 8 colour & 22 b&w photographs, 1 map
Series Environmental Arts and Humanit
Environmental Arts & Humanities S.
Environmental Arts and Humanit
Subjects Fiction > Narrative literature > Essays, feuilletons, literary criticism, interviews
Humanities, art, music > Art > Antiques
Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Biology > Ecology

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