Break Through: From the Death of Environmentalism to the Politics of Possibility
Ted Nordhaus, Michael Shellenberger, . . Houghton Mifflin, $25 (344pp) ISBN 978-0618658251
Three years after their contentious, seminal essay, “The Death of Environmentalism,†advocated a radical reassessment of the global warming dilemma, career environmental activists Nordhaus and Shellenberger present the book version, which mines postmaterialist thought for solutions that fall somewhere between the death threats and Band-Aid solutions they say are currently masquerading as debate and progress. Arguing that preservation requires something “qualitatively different from limiting our contamination of nature,†Nordhaus and Shellenberger contend that, as Americans, we must collectively sacrifice our standard of living to reverse the inevitable, a seemingly impossible but necessary task in a nation plagued by affluence envy and credit card debt. Referencing a wide array of current political and environmental work, the authors show how current pop environmentalism (think Al Gore's
Reviewed on: 12/31/2007
Genre: Nonfiction