e n d g a m e
A monumental work from the author of
A Language Older Than Words.
Derrick Jensen: Endgame
What if you live in the most destructive culture ever to exist? What if that culture refuses to change? What do you do about it?
Derrick Jensen named Press Action Person of the Year for 2006 From the Press Action website www.pressaction.com “The recipient of this award was never in doubt. Derrick Jensen’s Endgame, released in late spring, was the best work of nonfiction in 2006. Given the significance of its subject matter and the urgency of Jensen’s message, Endgame is the most important book of the decade and could stand as the must-read book of our lifetimes. But be careful.
The book is likely to send you into periods of despondency over the bleak future of the planet. But Jensen explains that if enough of us stand up and work together to fight the fascists, the crash won’t be as devastating.
And the long struggle will eventually result in an explosive renewal of all forms of life on the planet.” From the website www.endgamethebook.org:
“Having long laid waste our own sanity, and having long forgotten what it feels like to be free, most of us too have no idea what it’s like to live in the real world. Seeing four salmon spawn causes me to burst into tears. I have never seen a river full of fish. I have never seen a sky darkened for days by a single flock of birds. (I have, however, seen skies perpetually darkened by smog.) As with freedom, so too the extraordinary beauty and fecundity of the world itself: It’s hard to love something you’ve never known. It’s hard to convince yourself to fight for something you may not believe has ever existed.”
–from Endgame, Volume I “Hailed as the philosopher poet of the ecological movement, best-selling author Derrick Jensen returns with a passionate forecast of how industrial civilization, and the persistent and widespread violence it requires, is unsustainable. Jensen’s intricate weaving together of history, philosophy, environmentalism, economics, literature and psychology has produced a powerful argument that demands attention in the tradition of such important books as Herbert Marcuse’s Eros and Civilization and Brigid Brophy’s Black Ship to Hell.”
Part ONE:
[googlevideo=http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8649250863235826256]
Part TWO:
[googlevideo=http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=6557057252892383895]