The Art of the Commonplace gathers twenty essays by Wendell Berry that offer an agrarian alternative to our dominant urban culture. Grouped around five themes--an agrarian critique of culture, agrarian fundamentals, agrarian economics, agrarian religion, and geobiography--these essays promote a clearly defined and compelling vision important to all people dissatisfied with the stress, anxiety, disease, and destructiveness of contemporary American culture.
Why is agriculture becoming culturally irrelevant, and at what cost? What are the forces of social disintegration and how might they be reversed? How might men and women live together in ways that benefit both? And, how does the corporate takeover of social institutions and economic practices contribute to the destruction of human and natural environments?
Through his staunch support of local economies, his defense of farming communities, and his call for family integrity, Berry emerges as the champion of responsibilities and priorities that serve the health, vitality and happiness of the whole community of creation.
Another life is possible. Plough is an international magazine of stories, ideas, and culture, publishing daily online and quarterly in print. Books @ploughbooks
Put another way by Wendell Berry *The Art of the Commonplace: The Agrarian Essays* "One is married to marriage as well as to one's spouse. But one is married also to something vital of one's own that does not exist before the marriage: one's given word."
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"We have been wrong. We must change our lives, so that it will be possible to live by the contrary assumption that what is good for the world will be good for us." ―Wendell Berry, The Art of the Commonplace: The Agrarian Essays https://t.co/yR6OZNJHPY via @goodreads HT @MayaCPopa https://t.co/RlCxrJKhVO