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Barry Lopez

Landscape and the American Language

Presented by Knight Program for Science and Environmental Journalism

 

From ‘a'a—a highly fluid panhoehoe lava in Hawaii that moves with a sound like crockery breaking--to zigzag rocks—a series of low- chevron-shaped dams built by Native Americans designed to make the water more conducive for fishing, the words in Barry Lopez's latest project--a dictionary of American landscape terms--radiate a sense of belonging.

"The language we employ to say what we're looking at is now collapsing toward an attenuated list of almost nondescript words—valley, lake, mountain," Lopez writes in his introduction. This dictionary of words from the language of landscape, is an attempt to "gain a sense of allegiance with our chosen places."

Lopez has been praised by the San Francisco Chronicle as "arguably the nation's premier nature writer." He is the author of the National Book Award-winning Arctic Dreams and eleven other books of fiction and nonfiction. Lopez is uniquely suited to reviving the language of the American landscape in Home Ground.

The Knight Program in Science and Environmental Journalism is pleased to bring Barry Lopez to UC Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism to discuss this important new book. A book signing will follow.

See more events associated with the Magazine department of the J-School.

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Thursday - Thursday
October 05, 3:00 PM - September 26, 2006 6:00 PM

Location:
Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism
Library
North Gate Hall
UC Berkeley
Berkeley, CA
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Ticket Info:
This is a free event.
Event contact:
novella carpenter
510.847.7141
E-Mail
More info:
www.homegroundproject.com
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