Getting to the roots of wilderness : Chinese Canadian immigrant perceptions of wilderness in British Columbia
For centuries, Western societies thought of wilderness as a barren, desolate place that harboured temptation and sin. Over the last hundred and fifty years, a marked shift has occurred in Western perception of this so-called savage place; it has become revered, protected, and even worshipped. What...
Main Author: | Geddes, Bronwen Claire |
---|---|
Language: | English |
Published: |
2009
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12865 |
Similar Items
-
Getting to the roots of wilderness : Chinese Canadian immigrant perceptions of wilderness in British Columbia
by: Geddes, Bronwen Claire
Published: (2009) -
The wilderness myth : wilderness in British Columbia
by: Davies, Eric Owen
Published: (2011) -
An evaluation of public involvement in reclamation decision making at three metal mines in British Columbia
by: Britton, James McMullen
Published: (2009) -
An evaluation of public involvement in reclamation decision making at three metal mines in British Columbia
by: Britton, James McMullen
Published: (2009) -
The social construction of welfare fraud : the impact on front-line workers and welfare recipients in British Columbia (1993-1996)
by: Mason, Judy Lee
Published: (2009)