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Culture Gap - (Transmontanus) by Judith Plant (Paperback)

Culture Gap - (Transmontanus) by  Judith Plant (Paperback)
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Last Price: 19.00 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br><p>An absorbing account of a lifestyle emblematic of a time, <i>Culture Gap</i> also shows, from her own older perspective, a young mother's struggles to reconcile her social ideals of personal and environmental responsibility, and loving and caring for those closest to her.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><b>The pervasive, and intriguing, stories surrounding the mysterious Camelsfoot Commune in the Yalakom valley, BC, Canada.</b></p><p><em>Culture Gap: Towards a New World in the Yalakom Valley</em> tells the story of a two year sojourn at the Camelsfoot Commume in a remote valley in BC, Canada. The challenges and privations, the joys and adventures of rural communal living, form the backdrop to the human drama the author recounts. Judith and Kip Plant's family includes her children; Willie takes to the new life, but his sisters feel the strong pull of the life they left behind. Meanwhile Fred, the inspiration for the commune, stricken with cancer, is dying.</p> <p>An absorbing account of a lifestyle emblematic of a time, <em>Culture Gap</em> also shows, from her own older perspective, a young mother's struggles to reconcile her social ideals of personal and environmental responsibility, and loving and caring for those closest to her.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br><p><i>Judith Plant takes us on a journey we're not likely to forget. Thanks to her candour and the bold questions she leaves us with, this journey deepens our own search for relevance in a radically changing world. </i>-- Joanna Macy, author of <em>Widening Circles: A Memoir</em></p> <p><i>Decades ago, out back of beyond, Camelsfoot, a philosophical commune aspired to self-conscious culture making. Imbued with her conviction that a meaningful and caring life with others is our natural right, Judith Plant's memoir of its fleeting achievement and many uncommon good times glows with wisdom, complexity, and compassion. A noble read.</i> -- Stephanie Mills, author of <em>Epicurean Simplicity </em>and <em>In Service of the Wild</em></p> <p><i>The experiment of utopia has a long track record of failure, yet its allure will forever capture our dreams of possibility. It takes great courage to plunge into its trials and tribulations. It takes even greater courage to emerge at the other end knowing you have failed, and then write -- with sensitivity and openness -- about the many losses...and gains. Judith Plant embodies such courage. Her work is a testament to the power of lived experience.</i> -- Alejandro Frid, author of <em>A world for My Daughter: An Ecologist's Search for Optimism</em></p> <p><i>Judith Plant captures the spirit of a generation. Trust, good politics, community, imagination, culture creation, surprise, disappointment, death -- all figure into this spark of twentieth-century history.</i> -- Chellis Glendinning, author of <em>My Name is Chellis</em> <em>and</em> <em>I'm in Recovery from Western Civilization</em></p> <p><i>The passion with which some of the people tried to develop new ways of living and relating to each other filters through these pages with truth, as does the confusion in which participants were frequently mired. This is how it was. May other generations read this book with curiosity and learn from our trials, for their own evolution.</i> -- Delores Broten, editor of <em>Watershed Sentinel</em></p> <p><b>Judith Plant</b> is the acting publisher of New Society Publishers and the co-editor of <i>Healing the Wounds: the Promise of Ecofeminism</i> and <i>Home! A Bioregional Reader</i>. She lived in Camelsfoot for two years in the early 1980's with her children and her partner, Kip, and now lives on Gabriola Island, BC</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"Judith Plant takes us on a journey we're not likely to forget. Thanks to her candour and the bold questions she leaves us with, this journey deepens our own search for relevance in a radically changing world."- Joanna Macy, author of <em>Widening Circles: A Memoir</em></p><p>Decades ago, out back of beyond, Camelsfoot, a philosophical commune aspired to "self-conscious culture making." Imbued with her conviction that a "meaningful and caring life with others is our natural right," Judith Plant's memoir of its fleeting achievement and many uncommon good times glows with wisdom, complexity, and compassion. A noble read. - Stephanie Mills, author of <em>Epicurean Simplicity</em> and <em>In Service of the Wild</em></p><p>The experiment of uptopia has a long track record of failure, yet its allure will forever capture our dreams of possibility. It takes great courage to plunge into its trails and tribulations. It takes even greater courage to emerge at the other end knowing you have failed, and then write - with sensitivity and openess - about the many losses...and gains. Judith Plant embodies such courage. Her work is a testament to the power of "lived experience." - Alejandro Frid, author of <em>A world for My Daughter: an Ecologist's Search for Optimism</em></p><p>Judith Plant captures the spirit of a generation. Trust, good politics, community, imagination, culture creation, surprise, disappointment, death - all figure into this spark of twentieth-century history. - Chellis Glendinning, author of <em>My Name is Chellis and I'm in Recovery from Western Civilization</em></p><p>The passion with which some of the people tried to develop new ways of living and relating to each other filters through these pages with truth, as does the confusion in which participants were frequently mired. This is how it was. May other generations read this book with curiosity and learn from our trials, for their own evolution - Delores Broten, editor of <em>Watershed Sentinel</em><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><p><b>Judith Plant</b> is the acting publisher of New Society Publishers and the co-editor of <i>Healing the Wounds: the Promise of Ecofeminism</i> and <i>Home! A Bioregional Reader</i>. She lived in Camelsfoot for two years in the early 1980's with her children and her partner, Kip, and now lives on Gabriola Island, BC</p>

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