Summary Of Rethink Wilderness By William Cronon

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In William Cronon's essay, he started with "The time has come to rethink wilderness." Also, he declares that preserving wilderness is an essential task of the environmental movement. He argues how wilderness plays as an important condition for human to imagine as our true home. William Cronon awakens us the danger that can happen soon to the wilderness. The writer entreaties to readers' memories about being faced to nature. Especially, he mentions about the American wilderness because it is being almost destroyed so far. With lots of harmful circumstances that pollutions and diseases bring to our Civilization, people should have the perception about being more careful with wilderness to keep it clean and safe.
Cronon sends a message about …show more content…

He alos told us some of his experience when he traveled to Wastelands and around the USA. However, he was a Research Professor of Geography, History and Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He was the President of the American Historical Association in 2012 this made it easy for the reader to trust him and his info as well. Moreover, Cronon uses Thoreau's viewpoint to open the topic in the very beginning of the essay. He knows how to express his own argument to against a very well known opponent. Using the example of how Logos strategies when he says "Country people generally know far too much about working the land to regard unworked land as their ideal." The writer was clever to let us imagine beautiful momenta as an example of how pathos strategies are used. For instant, he said, "Remember this? The torrents of mist shoot out from the base of a great waterfall in the depths of a Sierra canyon, the tiny droplets cooling your face as you listen to the roar of the water and gaze up toward the sky through a rainbow that hovers just out of reach. Remember this too: looking out across a desert canyon in the evening air, the only sound a lone raven calling in the distance, the rock walls dropping away into a chasm so deep that its bottom all but vanishes as you squint into the amber light of the setting sun."
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