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| The Wild East (New Perspectives on the History of the South) | 
enlarge | Authors: Margaret L. Brown, Margaret Lynn Brown Publisher: University Press of Florida Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy Used: $9.75 You Save: $15.20 (61%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 816174
Media: Paperback Edition: 1st Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 504 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 1.3
ISBN: 081302093X Dewey Decimal Number: 910 EAN: 9780813020938 ASIN: 081302093X
Publication Date: February 12, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: cover and pages clean and unmarked, a nice lightly read copy, some edge ware -- ships within 24 hours !
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Explores the social, political, and environmental changes in the Great Smoky Mountains during the 19th & 20th centuries. Although this national park is often portrayed as a triumph of preservation, Brown concludes that the largest forested region in the eastern US is actually a re-created wilderness-a product of restoration & even manipulation of the land. Park management continues to waffle between shifting views of wilderness, negotiating the contradictory mission of promoting tourism and preservation.
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| Customer Reviews:
Tells the story of the peoples of the Smokies October 6, 2008 Rather than offering us a history of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Brown conceives this book as a "biography" of the Smokies. As a result, she tries to focus the story on the personal level, in terms of how people have experienced this land. Naturally, the residents of this land get top billing but visitors increasingly crowd the stage.
Brown makes extensive use of oral histories, which changes the focus of this history. She sees the traditional forest economy from the standpoint of mountaineers and Cherokees, and tells us how the entry of lumber companies into the area changed that economy. Then she moves to more familiar stories around creation of the park, the damming of the Little Tennessee River by the TVA, and the growth of automobile tourism. As other reviewers have noted, she spends surprisingly little time on the role of Kephart in creation of the park, a lacuna that I cannot explain.
Brown writes academic prose, but in a lively style. Though not a local, she now lives and teaches nearby and she has clearly developed a passion for this land. If you're a visitor to the Smokies and want to know more about the people of this land, this may be the best book for you.
A fine book about the Smokies July 19, 2007 Margaret Lynn Brown has written a fine first book about the Smokies, a park in which I have hiked almost annually for the better part of thirty years. The history of the area is familiar to me, but I was still fascinated by the details of such topics as "The Road to Nowhere," the wild boar controversy, the introduction of horseback riding, and other choices about wildness ratified by the National Park Service. The author writes well enough, and the illustrations have been well chosen.
Like many revised dissertations, this book includes too many quotations, especially pedestrian ones from park service personnel whom the author has interviewed. Brown is also a "tongue clucker" who treats people of the past as if they should have known better than say, to feed bears or clear-cut old growth forest. Nor do I believe that the greatest threat to the environment is "unregulated industrial capitalism," a notion that some concentrated thoughts about the environmental disaster of sub-Saharan Africa might disabuse. At least Brown and I agree on the crassness of contemporary tourism in Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge.
Examining the past May 3, 2004 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This book is a wonderful review of the history and management of Great Smokies National Park. The author brings to life the dirty details of the heroic political triumphs and failures associated with the park. As well as, the ecological changes that swept the Appalachian mountians and the new challenges still faced. In addition, she drives home the social cost inherent in the changes that have occured in the Smoky Mt. region. Her book sheds light on the key poltical, ecological and social issues facing the park today. If you are looking for a book that paints a "quaint" picture of Appalachia, don't look here. If on the other hand you want a book that will make you think about the complex interactions of ecology, human relationships and politcal struggles, read on!
Recommended for fans January 21, 2003 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
M.L. Brown's The Wild East: A Biography of the Great Smoky Mountain National Park is the amazing story of the centerpiece of eastern wilderness. Introducing herself and her work with a refreshing and highly personal account, Brown immediately enlightens the reader as to her motivations. What proceeds is a history that is so meticulously researched that the wildness of the park seems almost suburban, making The Wild East simultaneously fascinating and slightly disappointing. But pathos is bound to ensue after the mythical GSMNP is taken off of its pedestal, and Brown delivers a heavy dose of reality by focusing on prior land use within the park, the contradictions of park management, and the nebulous concept of 'wilderness'. The result is an accurate account of the park's creation that de-shrouds it of some of its wild mystery, an effect that might not be enjoyed by every reader.In Brown's defense, she had few complete histories of the park to update and examine (outside of D.S. Pierce's The Great Smokies), and the litany of personal accounts, newspaper articles, and other histories that she unearths make for a tremendous piece of scholarship. Brown leaves no stone unturned in describing the opportunism of the Tennesseans and consternation of the North Carolineans, and she fully reviews both sides of every major argument that enveloped the park to the present. Of particular interest is her focus on making the history of park and area residents seem less like 'hillbillies' and more like average Americans of a century ago, with many personal accounts of day-to-day Appalachian life. But missing in her attempt to please everybody is a sense of the rancor and vitriol that must have surrounded the park's formation, guided by a healthy dose of eccentricity from all of the wonderful folk who gave a hand in helping of hindering the park's will to survive. Her most flagrant omission is an unbiased discussion Horace Kephart and his contributions to both regional anthropology and the park's development; Kephart is only mentioned in passing. For a park with such a dynamic history, one might wish for a more dynamic story, with a greater sense of the conflict and character that makes the Great Smoky Mountains the centerpiece of eastern wilderness. Again, a good portion of the park was settled, and thus its status as 'wilderness' is a matter of debate. To this end Brown inexplicably addresses eminent environmental historian William Cronon on the topic of wilderness in her conclusion, which is a departure from her storyline and should have been omitted. Had she debated wilderness directly throughout the book her conclusion would not be so disjoint. An argument that Brown does develop is the issue of land management both within and around the park, with a focus on the Gatlinburg area and conflict surrounding park managers and policies. Her bear management discussion is particularly strong, as is the history of contrasting land development on the North Carolina and Tennessee sides of the park and park management of Cades' Cove. In short, despite its shortcomings, The Wild East is a necessary read for all GSMNP enthusiasts. Brown's honest history might make the park lose some of its luster, but will also surely create new leagues fans for the dynamic GSMNP.
Interesting March 18, 2002 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Margaret Lynn Brown's "The Wild East" is an important contribution to the field of environmental history. The author seems to know the region where the Great Smoky Mountains is in, well. She traces the history of the Smokies and of the people living there. She analyzes how the Smokies came to be under the federal government's jurisdiction and how the landscape was changed profoundly.What I find most interesting is the attempt by a superintendent's effort to preserve the mountains as pristine as possible but he came up with some strong objections by surrounding residents who were concern about bringing money in to the region. Also, surrounding towns began to flourish as attractions like Ripley Believe it or Not and even Dollywood became the focus of tourists going to the Smokies to get away from the hustle and bustle of everyday life. It's almost ironic that there is such drastic difference between the Smokies, where wilderness is preserve and the very commericialized towns surrounding the mountains.
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