Morel Tales: The Culture of Mushrooming

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University of Illinois Press, 2003 - Nature - 324 pages
Drawing on the observations of three years spent in the company of dedicated amateur mushroomers and professional mycologists, Gary Alan Fine explores the ways in which Americans attempt to give meaning to the natural world, while providing an eye-opening look inside the cultures they construct around its study and appreciation.
A landmark work of environmental sociology, Morel Tales is an engaging and instructive examination of a thriving community, one with its own language, ceremonies, jokes, narratives, rivalries, and social codes. Fine also provides a detailed discussion of the American phenomenon he calls "naturework" -- that is, culturally constructing one's own place in the natural environment through communities with shared systems of assigned meaning.
"Naturework," Fine observes, is something we all do on some level -- not only birders, butterfly collectors, rock hounds, hunters, hikers, campers, and outdoor enthusiasts, but all of us who construct community through narrative and nature through culture.
 

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Contents

Being in Nature
27
Meaningful Mushrooms
57
Sharing the Woods
93
Talking Wild
134
Organizing Naturalists
164
Fungus and Us Publics
205
Natureworh and the Taming of the Wild
248
Notes
263
Index
316
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Page 11 - Visible nature is all plasticity and indifference, — a moral multiverse, as one might call it, and not a moral universe. To such a harlot we owe no allegiance ; with her as a whole we can establish no moral communion...

About the author (2003)

Gary Alan Fine is a professor of sociology at Northwestern University and the author of nineteen books, including Kitchens: The Culture of Restaurant Work, and Gifted Tongues: High School Debate and Adolescent Culture.

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