2002-03: Gratitude and Greed
Volume 11: 2002-2003
What can we define as greed, and what is its source? Is greed a symptom of some deeper affliction? There may be responses to greed that are powerful enough to turn our focus in other directions. Do our literary or spiritual traditions support shifting our focus to gratitude? Does gratitude overcome greed, or do we simply use it to mollify our guilt? Contributors to this issue of Whole Terrain examine personal and professional responses to gratitude and greed as they relate to environmental practice.
Introduction
2002/2003 Introduction
Michael Wojtech
Poetry
- The Next Customer
Ethan Gilsdorf
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Essays
- The Give and Take of Wildcrafting
Laird Christensen
- Counting Coquinas
April Newlin
- Who Hears the Fishes When They Cry?
Jonathan Schach
- Seeing Through the Changes
Heidi Watts
- The Fisherman
Peter Temes
- The Disease of Appetite
John H. Van Ness
- Facing Our Relationship with Matter; The Art of Mierle Laderman Ukeles
June LaCombe
- Ecological Karma
Paul Krafel
- The Disease of Appetite
John H. Van Ness
- Ruins
Charles Mitchell
- Practicing with Greed
Stephanie Kaza
- A Conversation with Lewis Hyde
Alesia Maltz
- Fat with Frits
Robert Michael Pyle
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