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From the Agrarian Studies Series at Yale University Press comes a moving exploration of presence and place told through the stories of small-scale farmers who, despite intense adversity, continue caring for their land.
Love for the Land: Lessons from Farmers Who Persist in Place explores the power and potential of people-place relationships. Through clear and compelling prose, it elevates the virtues of imagination, affection, and fidelity—concepts promoted by farmer-writer Wendell Berry—and shows how they motivate small- and mid-scale farmers to care for the land, even in the face of adversity. Paying particular attention to farmland loss from suburban sprawl, rampant agricultural consolidation, and, for farmers of color, racial injustice, Brooks Lamb reckons with the harsh realities that these farmers face.
Drawing from in-depth interviews and hands-on experiences in two changing rural communities, he shares stories and sacrifices from dozens of farmers, local leaders, agricultural service providers, and land conservationists. Lamb’s rural roots and farming background enable him to cultivate honest, trusting connections with the farmers he engages, yielding raw and powerful insights. Time and again, compelling evidence reveals that stewardship virtues encourage people to live and act as devoted caretakers.
With a refreshing, accessible, and engaging approach, Lamb argues that these resilient and often overlooked farmers show rural and urban people alike a way forward, one that serves people, places, and the planet. That path is rooted in love for the land.
“Brooks Lamb has taken seriously my father Wendell Berry’s assertion that we don’t have an agricultural crisis in America but a cultural crisis. He dares to take the virtues of affection and fidelity to particular places as economic necessities. Working landscapes and the farming people who belong to them have been ignored for generations; we have nearly lost the cultural knowledge that they hold. He tells their stories with due respect and calls upon us to learn from them.” — Mary Berry, executive director, The Berry Center
“Love for the Land is excellent. It reinforces that the work we do daily has a spiritual presence. In this book, Brooks Lamb makes real the humanity of the land and our relationship to the land.” — Ebonie Alexander, executive director, Black Family Land Trust
“Love for the Land puts readers directly in touch with farmers, highlighting their hopes and concerns as they navigate a complex agricultural and land management landscape. Given the absence of farmer voices in today’s increasingly urban world, this book is more necessary than ever.” — Norman Wirzba, author of This Sacred Life: Humanity’s Place in a Wounded World
““In Love for the Land, Lamb powerfully explores the virtues of stewardship, tracing their import in and through quotidian rhythms of care, crises of consolidation, and the vital demands of environmental justice and racial equity. This is a graceful, thoughtful book.” — Grace Olmstead, author of Uprooted: Recovering the Legacy of the Places We’ve Left Behind
"With the sense of a small farmer as well as the skills of a seasoned ethnographer, Lamb cuts through and lays bare problems, their causes, and their consequences on the land and the lives of his subjects. ..."
"Even in the face of consolidation, rural gentrification and systemic racism, some smaller-scale farmers persevere. Their sometimes-self-sacrificial stewardship is driven by love for the land, leading to what farmer-writer Wendell Berry describes as fidelity or devotion to place. When told to “get big or get out,” these farmers choose neither. In doing so, they show us the power and potential of people-place relationships."
"[Love for the Land] is a portrait of two changing Tennessee counties and the people who populate them – those who’ve chosen to stay in their changing hometowns in the face of development pressures and agricultural agglomeration."
"Through a series of intimate portraits and cogent analysis, Love for the Land confronts the hard realities and structural injustices facing young farmers and farmers from marginalized backgrounds and how these farmers are cultivating resilient communities and regenerating the health of our land."
"Lamb, a graduate of Rhodes College in Memphis, is a link between the family farm and academia. His resume and rural roots make him uniquely qualified to write a book about the importance of farming in the U.S. and suggest helpful policies to support small farmers as they struggle to survive."
"In this captivating work, Lamb highlights the resilience and determination of these often-overlooked individuals and argues that their stories offer valuable lessons for both rural and urban communities. Through their experiences, Lamb shows readers a path forward that prioritizes the needs of people, places, and the planet."
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