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Environment

Wandering signifier

Two books on nature
by Richard King
September 2025, no. 479

Beyond Green by Lesley Head

Melbourne University Press, $39.99 pb, 252 pp

Human/Nature by Jane Rawson

NewSouth, $34.99 pb, 213 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.

The idea of ‘green politics’ is implicitly self-limiting. Unlike the blue that we associate with the right, or the red we associate with the left, green is taken to refer to the substance of a political ideology: to the natural world of plants and trees, to ‘pristine’ nature and ‘unspoiled’ wilderness. As such, it tends to reproduce a simplistic distinction between humanity and nature – a distinction that is inseparable from the very environmental crises through which green politics proposes to steer us. Consciously or otherwise, environmentalism is constructed as something to do with the world’s ‘green spaces’, as opposed to a politics of human transformation.

 


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Beyond Green by Lesley Head

Melbourne University Press, $39.99 pb, 252 pp

Human/Nature by Jane Rawson

NewSouth, $34.99 pb, 213 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


From the New Issue

‘Journey Beginning Things’

by Charmaine Papertalk Green

The Shortest History of Turkey: A candid examination by Benjamin C. Fortna

by Hans-Lukas Kieser

The Odyssey: A mesmerising guide to Odysseus’s world by Homer, translated from ancient Greek by Daniel Mendelsohn

by Glyn Davis

The Sea in the Metro: A memoir in search of juste by Jayne Tuttle

by Kirsten Krauth

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