Beschreibung
During the four decades the Iron Curtain divided the authors native Germany, over 1,200 rare animal and plant species found refuge in the highly militarized border striptodays Grünes Band or Green Belt. After three decades abroad, Lange uses the 1,400-kilometer-long Green Belt as a prism to investigate the human, social, and ecological stories surrounding the former borderland. Using an anthropological and journalistic approach, Lange presents multifaceted perspectives on life along the border, the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the societal echoes of the German division and the process of Reunification. Pivoting to the present, the book addresses questions of migration, identity, and belonging in light of the proliferation of militarized borders today. Lange concludes by pointing to the glimpse the Green Belt offers into much older landscapes for clues about the ecological dimension of home.
Autorenportrait
Kerstin Lange is a writer and journalist based in Vermont. Originally from northern Germany and fluent in German, she holds an M.A. in Anthropology and an M.S. in Natural History/Ecology. She has taught in both fields, worked with biological anthropologists among nomads in northwest Kenya, and consulted on natural history-based land management. Lange has published in SAPIENS, Northern Woodlands, The Revelator, and Vermont Quarterly magazines and was a commentator on Vermont Public Radio for ten years. Her mission is to make history and ecology personal.