Rainbow Dust

Three Centuries of Butterfly Delight

Nonfiction, Science & Nature, Science, Biological Sciences, Entomology, Nature, Insects & Spiders
Cover of the book Rainbow Dust by Peter Marren, University of Chicago Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Peter Marren ISBN: 9780226395913
Publisher: University of Chicago Press Publication: October 31, 2016
Imprint: University of Chicago Press Language: English
Author: Peter Marren
ISBN: 9780226395913
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Publication: October 31, 2016
Imprint: University of Chicago Press
Language: English

Like fluttering shards of stained glass, butterflies possess a unique power to pierce and stir the human soul. Indeed, the ancient Greeks explicitly equated the two in a single word, psyche, so that from early times butterflies were not only a form of life, but also an idea. Profound and deeply personal, written with both wisdom and wit, Peter Marren’s Rainbow Dust explores this idea of butterflies—the why behind the mysterious power of these insects we do not flee, but rather chase.

At the age of five, Marren had his “Nabokov Moment,” catching his first butterfly and feeling the dust of its colored scales between his fingers. It was a moment that would launch a lifetime’s fascination rivaling that of the famed novelist—a fascination that put both in good company. From the butterfly collecting and rearing craze that consumed North America and Europe for more than two hundred years (a hobby that in some cases bordered on madness), to the potent allure of butterfly iconography in contemporary advertisements and their use in spearheading calls to conserve and restore habitats (even though butterflies are essentially economically worthless), Marren unveils the many ways in which butterflies inspire us as objects of beauty and as symbols both transient and transcendent.

Floating around the globe and through the whole gamut of human thought, from art and literature to religion and science, Rainbow Dust is a cultural history rather than merely a natural one, a tribute to butterflies’ power to surprise, entertain, and obsess us. With a sway that far surpasses their fragile anatomy and gentle beat, butterfly wings draw us into the prismatic wonders of the natural world—and, in the words of Marren, these wonders take flight.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Like fluttering shards of stained glass, butterflies possess a unique power to pierce and stir the human soul. Indeed, the ancient Greeks explicitly equated the two in a single word, psyche, so that from early times butterflies were not only a form of life, but also an idea. Profound and deeply personal, written with both wisdom and wit, Peter Marren’s Rainbow Dust explores this idea of butterflies—the why behind the mysterious power of these insects we do not flee, but rather chase.

At the age of five, Marren had his “Nabokov Moment,” catching his first butterfly and feeling the dust of its colored scales between his fingers. It was a moment that would launch a lifetime’s fascination rivaling that of the famed novelist—a fascination that put both in good company. From the butterfly collecting and rearing craze that consumed North America and Europe for more than two hundred years (a hobby that in some cases bordered on madness), to the potent allure of butterfly iconography in contemporary advertisements and their use in spearheading calls to conserve and restore habitats (even though butterflies are essentially economically worthless), Marren unveils the many ways in which butterflies inspire us as objects of beauty and as symbols both transient and transcendent.

Floating around the globe and through the whole gamut of human thought, from art and literature to religion and science, Rainbow Dust is a cultural history rather than merely a natural one, a tribute to butterflies’ power to surprise, entertain, and obsess us. With a sway that far surpasses their fragile anatomy and gentle beat, butterfly wings draw us into the prismatic wonders of the natural world—and, in the words of Marren, these wonders take flight.

More books from University of Chicago Press

Cover of the book Temporary Kings by Peter Marren
Cover of the book Urban Neighborhoods in a New Era by Peter Marren
Cover of the book Music and Capitalism by Peter Marren
Cover of the book Return to Casablanca by Peter Marren
Cover of the book Emancipation of the Polish Peasantry by Peter Marren
Cover of the book Religious Bodies Politic by Peter Marren
Cover of the book Noise by Peter Marren
Cover of the book Out of the Wreck I Rise by Peter Marren
Cover of the book The Maze Maker by Peter Marren
Cover of the book A History of the Twentieth Century in 100 Maps by Peter Marren
Cover of the book The Peloponnesian War by Peter Marren
Cover of the book Reconstruction after the Civil War, Third Edition by Peter Marren
Cover of the book Robert Schumann by Peter Marren
Cover of the book Wild Sea by Peter Marren
Cover of the book Why Niebuhr Now? by Peter Marren
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy