- Disambiguation: For the fictional character, see Daniel Quinn (City of Glass).
| Daniel Quinn | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1935 (age 73–74) Omaha, Nebraska, USA |
| Occupation | Writer |
| Official website | |
Daniel Quinn (born 1935 in Omaha, Nebraska) is an American writer described as an environmentalist. He is best known for his book Ishmael (1992), which won the Turner Tomorrow Fellowship Award in 1991.
Quinn himself does not identify as an "environmentalist," arguing instead as his central thesis (and throughout his works) that humans are not separate from but part of the so-called "environment" (which, like "nature," is typically conceived of as being out there somewhere, and somehow distinct from us).
Contents |
Biography
Daniel Quinn studied at Saint Louis University, University of Vienna, Austria, and Loyola University, receiving a bachelor's degree in English, cum laude, in 1957.
In 1975, he abandoned his career as a publisher to become a freelance writer. Quinn is best known for his book Ishmael (1992), which won the Turner Tomorrow Fellowship Award in 1991. This fellowship was established to encourage authors to seek "creative and positive solutions to global problems". Ishmael is the first of a trilogy including The Story of B, and My Ishmael. The 1999 film Instinct started from parts of this story.
Ishmael and its sequels brought ever-increasing fame to Quinn throughout the 1990s, and he became a very well-known author to certain segments of the environmental movement, the simplicity movement, the anarchist movement and Anarcho-primitivism movements. Quinn has traveled widely to lecture and discuss his books.
Daniel Quinn offers readers a way out of the dilemma between inattention and blame. It is tough to hold the attention on global problems and still imagine solutions and reasons for hope. Some blame humanity in general, and claim "human nature" necessarily leads to species loss and habitat degradation. In the writings of Daniel Quinn, one can find a perspective that is pro-sustainability and pro-human, an antidote to views of humans as inherently toxic to the world.
While response to Ishmael was mostly very positive, Quinn inspired a great deal of controversy with his claim (most explicitly discussed in the appendix section of The Story of B) that since population growth is a function of food supply, sustained food aid to impoverished nations merely puts off and dramatically worsens a massive population-environment crisis. This crisis is born of a disconnect between local humans and the local habitat with its food. Quinn points out that ending this disconnect is a proven way to avoid famines.
In 1998 Quinn collaborated with environmental biologist Alan D. Thornhill, PhD, in producing Food Production and Population Growth, a 2 hour 40 minute video (later DVD) elaborating in depth the ideas presented in his books.
Quinn's book Tales of Adam was released in 2005 after a long bankruptcy scuffle with its initially scheduled publisher. It is designed to be a look through the animist's eyes in seven short tales.
Related authors include Jean Liedloff, Derrick Jensen, John Zerzan, Edward Goldsmith, and Fredy Perlman.
Quinn currently lives in Houston, Texas with his wife Rennie.
Bibliography
- (1988) Dreamer
- (1992) Ishmael
- (1996) The Story of B
- (1996) Providence: The Story of a 50 Year Vision Quest (autobiography)
- (1997) My Ishmael
- (1997) A Newcomer's Guide to the Afterlife (with Tom Whalen)
- (1999) An Animist Testament (audio cassette of Quinn reading The Tales of Adam and The Book of the Damned)
- (2000) Beyond Civilization
- (2001) The Man Who Grew Young (graphic novel)
- (2001) After Dachau
- (2002) The Holy
- (2005) Tales of Adam
- (2006) Work, Work, Work
- (2007) If They Give You Lined Paper, Write Sideways
Key concepts
- New tribalists
- Food Race
- Overpopulation
- Law of Limited Competition
External links
- Ishmael.org - The Ishmael community, Daniel Quinn's official website
- The Friends of Ishmael Society
- Read Ishmael - a website devoted to encouraging people to read Ishmael
- Ishthink.org - thinking about Ishmael
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)




