Throughout history, humans have had a strong reliance on nature and their environment. As far back as historians can look, people have depended on elements of nature for their survival. In the past few decades, the increased advancement of technology has led to an unfortunate division between humans and nature, and this lack of respect is becoming a flaw in current day society. In Last Child in the Woods, Louv criticizes modern culture by arguing that humans increasing reliance on technology has led to their decreasing connection with nature through the use of relevant anecdotes, rhetorical questions and powerful imagery to appeal to ethos. Louv develops his argument by using insightful anecdotes that allow him to become more relatable to the reader. He relays a story about his friend’s experience of being pushed to buy “multimedia entertainment products” by a car salesman selling her a luxury car. This anecdote is enhanced by a hyperbole to describe how the car salesmen’s “jaw dropped” when she decided to draw the line. The use of the anecdote makes Louv seem more personable to any parent who desires convenience because it shows that he understands the appeal of such luxuries, but he continues by showing everything the child is losing from not observing the natural landscape and experiencing the real and physical world. This anecdote allows the reader to experience the same feelings that the friend may of felt in that situation. This makes the argument a more relatable
Arguably his most powerful rhetorical strategy is a joint appeal to ethos and pathos. Louv calls readers to consider what “we'll someday tell our grandchildren” if the devaluation of nature continues. Parents respond to the ethical appeal by relating to Louv as he ponders his legacy and “our” grandchildren. They respond to Louv’s appeal to pathos by feeling a deep, personal pain that their childhood pastimes are as antiquated as a “nineteenth-century Conestoga wagon.” By causing readers to feel antiquated, to relate to him, and to question their legacy, Louv stirs them to teach their children the same appreciation for nature they grew up with, if only to preserve their heritage. Louv further rouses hours readers with imagery, describing “the empty farmhouse,” “steamy edges,” and “thunderheads and dancing rain” that his readers grew up watching out their car windows. Reminiscing with readers, painting images of their childhoods, reminds parents of the beautiful, wonderful things they learned and memories they made while observing nature during car rides. Expanding on readers’ pasts, Louv references the rapid technological changes that his readers went through during the globalization movement, changes that separated them from nature “in the blink of an eye.” Readers are invested in their parts and Louv uses their attraction to their childhood memories and dissatisfaction with the rapid
The use of technology in society today has drastically increased and has became difficult to comprehend. To the point where it started to consume people’s lives no matter how hard they strived to be individuals, and it drew a wedge between society and nature. In Richard Louv’s passage, “Last Child In The Woods,” he emphasizes how over time the relationship between people and nature has declined by using rhetorical strategies such as imagery, anecdotes, and hypothetical examples.
As humans become intrigued to the developing digital reality around them, they become unaware of the existing world around them. Within Richard Louv's Last Child in the Woods, Louv begins to explain the advancement of technology, then continues to argue about how society is beginning to drift away from the experiences of nature. Louv also calls the audience into action, he develops his argument with the use of irony and juxtaposition. He thoroughly applies juxtaposition and irony creates an aspiring tone for the audience to bring action of the upcoming world.
When talking about what Louv did as a child he writes, “In our useful boredom, we used our fingers to draw pictures on the fogged glass as we watched telephone poles tick by. We saw the birds on the wires and combined in the fields” (Louv 62-65). Louv describes in great detail what he did when he was a little kid. He uses imagery to get the image inside the reader's head and compare what he did as a kid versus what kids now do. When talking about what kids now do in the backseat of a car, he writes, “The children can watch Sesame Street or play Grand Theft Auto on their PlayStation without bothering the driver”
In 2008, Robert Louv wrote a book titled Last Child in the Woods which elucidates the expanding gap between people and nature. Louv develops an argument in one section of the book that states technology is the cause for the separation of people- specifically those of the technological generation- and nature. In the passage from Last Child in the Woods, Louv uses anaphora, rhetorical questions, and appeals to ethos to develop his argument regarding the gap technology is forming between people and nature.
‘The sheer popularity’ of stimulating nature or using nature as ad space ‘demands that we acknowledge, even respect, their cultural importance,’ suggests Richtel. Culturally important, yes. But the logical extension of synthetic nature is the irrelevance of ‘true’ nature— the certainty that it’s not even worth looking at. (Louv lines 9-19)
In his passage from “Last Child In the Woods”, author Richard Louv illustrates how people today don’t appreciate the greatness of nature, as adequately as they should. In employing multiple rhetorical strategies, Louv forces the audience to feel ashamed and remorseful for wanting to create a sort of artificial nature, and deprive their children from experiencing nature in its vastness. In addition to using very accusatory tone, Louv utilizes sarcastic diction, metaphors, and repetition to remind to the older generations, or anyone who remembers a world without modern technology, to teach the younger generations to always appreciate the world outside of their screen.
Within the modern world, and the modern thought process people have about our connection with new technologies is one of constant expanse. All caution is thrown to the wind in an attempt to satisfy one insatiable hunger for a certain type of keeping up with the Jones-es. Many authors speak on the wonder of technological advances on society by the exact means of how they work, however, Richard Louv is not this kind of author. He presents technology as useful, but with an underlying tone of a technological numbing agent. We begin to only see it instead of what Earth has given us millions of years. Technology is only a certain part of the problem with the real problem being humanity's mindset toward our greatest asset, nature. Mr. Louv uses extremely profound and intelligent rhetoric to push forward the idea that us as humans are already so broken away from nature, that eventually it will be deemed illogical we used it for anything other than a means produce by it. Richard shows three areas we have really broken apart from nature with the three examples of ad space for parks, extra commodities for an SUV, and the genetic modification of animals.
Richard Louv, in his book “Last Child in the Woods” describes the dramatic change that the world is now facing. Louv’s purpose is to show reader that not everything that we invent is good. In addition, the writer uses a reader-friendly tone in order to establish that he is not going to be harsh on any one person. Also, the author creates a factual tone by giving reader lots of information. Louv does so by utilizing diction in order to establish the mood and tone in the passage.With the use of rhetorical devices such as diction, nostalgia, and rhetorical questioning, Louv has a powerful impact and gets his point across to the audience.
Human desire for affluence over the course of modern history has proven to be a driving force in the detriment of the natural world, demonstrating the apathetic outlook humans have towards our . Richard Louv’s Last Child argument describes the loosening of interest in our current generation; it has built a wall that one day may cut our ropes from earthly surroundings. Although this passage was written with incontrovertible accuracy about humans in the present, the author’s bias outlook, which reflects in the tone of his writing,makes this piece undeniably one sided, which not only takes credibility away from the author’s argument, but also creates this controversial idea of modern technology serving as an unhealthy focus in today’s society that only distracts humans away from the environment.
Technology throughout the past 30-40 years has become more advanced and accessible than ever. The television specifically has developed extremely since its beginning. What started off as a single camera caption, has developed into a full fledge worldwide availability. Within the United States, the TV is a normal everyday object common in households, hotels, schools, and even restaurants. There are approximately 118.4 million household in the United States that own a television set ( The Number of TV Households in the United States from season 2000-2001 to season 2016-2017 (in millions)).However, the increased amount of time spent watching TV has had a tremendous impact on people, especially kids. The differences in generations throughout the development of the TV has led to many questions, all revolving around whether or not the televisions has had a good or negative impact pertaining to children. Time spent watching television affects the brain, ability to learn, and skill levels in different areas (source. In the book “Last Child in The Woods,” Richard Louv discusses how children in the 1940’s would watch out the window at the scenery and have conversations, while children now sit and watch a movie on a flip-down video screen without knowledge to the outside world (Louv 16-17).
In the passage from Richard Louv book, Last Child in the Woods, Louv develops an argument about the separation of people and nature. He is worried about the future because nature seems worthless to younger people, kids aren't experiencing nature and that is becoming the new norm.
Through removal and technology, humans have started to become isolated from the wilderness and the nature around them. This view distinctly contrasts with Thoreau’s perspective. “Though he [Thoreau] never put humans on the same moral level as animals or trees, for example, he does see them all linked as the expression of Spirit, which may only be described in terms of natural laws and unified fluid processes. The self is both humbled and empowered in its cosmic perspective,” states Ann Woodlief. The technologies that distract and consume us, and separate us from the natural world are apparent. Many people and children ins cities have seen little to no natural-grown things such as grass and trees. Even these things are often domesticated and tamed. Many people who have never been to a National Park or gone hiking through the wilderness do not understand its unruly, unforgiving, wild nature. These aspects, thought terrifying to many, are much of why the wilderness is so beautiful and striking to the human heart. “Thoreau builds a critique of American culture upon his conviction that ‘the mind can be permanently profaned by the habit of attending to trivial things, so that all our thoughts shall be tinged with triviality,’” pronounces Rick Furtak, quoting Thoreau’s Life
In today’s world, it is often deemed that the younger generation “cannot seem to get off their phone,” that we cannot hold an attention span for longer than thirty seconds without wanting to check our social media or the fact that all of us simply care about technology. In Ursula LeGuin’s short story “Direction of the Road,” LeGuin depicts the life of an oak tree and treats it as if it were a human, giving it thoughts and feelings, and telling an overall story of how it feels ignored; the story progresses to show that the tree then kills a driver when the they collide with the tree. After reading this short passage, one might believe the stigma that the human race of today ignores the importance of nature and pays more attention to technology; however, this is not true for various reasons. Although technology is rapidly advancing in today’s society, we still find the effort to take care and appreciate our environment; this can be seen through the environmental justice movement, the way we strive to make
We live in an age where resources that are essential to our survival are not yielded from our immediate environment, but acquired through legal tender which we have earned through labor. This allows western societies to thrive in all types of natural habitat. Whether you live in Nevada, or Alaska, you can always walk into a local grocery store and purchase a carton of milk, despite the fact that neither is a good place to raise cattle. This kind of arrangement has simplified our lives to a certain extent, but it has also caused a disconnection between us and mother nature. For centuries, our ancestors’ survival was inorexably linked to their surrounding environment. Their survival depended on their ability to interpret and negotiate