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704 pages, Hardcover
First published February 1, 2023
Barbed wire was delineating a new regime – economic, ecological, cultural. A world of semi-nomadic hunters had given way to one of businessmen, large and small, intent on rationalizing nature. They replaced millions of indigenous animals with millions of an alien species. They then used new technologies, including billions of pieces of sharpened metal in partnership with railroads and telegraphs and slaughterhouses, to redesign an incomparably complex natural system eight times the size of New England. They partitioned that system into artificial parts shaped not according to practiced use but by bottom lines of ledger sheets. They did all this, and more, to turn the land toward purposes never tried there, those of a modern pastoralism. This was a wholly imagined ideal, one unfettered from experience and inspired by claims of the purest gas. Many of the men in charge directed affairs from a distance with as much understanding of local realities as a chicken has of a warranty deed. In an audacious era, this was audacity of a rare order, made from sudden opportunity amplified by western dreaming. Its regime could hardly have been better positioned for disaster.