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Daniel Quinn

Daniel Clarence Quinn (October 11, 1935 – February 17, 2018)[2] was an American author (primarily, novelist and fabulist),[3] cultural critic,[4] and publisher of educational texts, best known for his novel Ishmael, which won the Turner Tomorrow Fellowship Award in 1991 and was published the following year. Quinn's ideas are popularly associated with environmentalism, though he criticized this term for portraying the environment as separate from human life, thus creating a false dichotomy.[5] Instead, Quinn referred to his philosophy as "new tribalism".[6]

For other people with this name, see Daniel Quinn (disambiguation).

Daniel Clarence Quinn

(1935-10-11)October 11, 1935[1]
Omaha, Nebraska, U.S.

February 17, 2018(2018-02-17) (aged 82)
Houston, Texas, U.S.

Writer

Biography[edit]

Daniel Quinn was born in Omaha, Nebraska, where he graduated from Creighton Preparatory School. He went on to study at Saint Louis University, at the University of Vienna, Austria, through IES Abroad, and at Loyola University, receiving a bachelor's degree in English cum laude in 1957. He delayed part of this university education, however, while a postulant at the Abbey of Our Lady of Gethsemani in Bardstown, Kentucky, where he hoped to become a Trappist monk;[7] however his spiritual director, Thomas Merton, prematurely ended Quinn's postulancy. Quinn went into publishing, abandoned his Catholic faith, and married twice unsuccessfully,[8] before marrying Rennie MacKay Quinn, his third and final wife of 42 years.[9]


In 1975, Quinn left his career as a publisher to become a freelance writer. He is best known for his book Ishmael (1992), which won the Turner Tomorrow Fellowship Award in 1991. Several judges disputed giving the entire $500,000 award to Quinn for Ishmael, rather than dividing the money among several authors, though judge Ray Bradbury, for one, supported the decision.[10] Ishmael became the first of a loose trilogy of novels by Quinn, including The Story of B and My Ishmael, all of which brought increasing fame to Quinn throughout the 1990s. He became a well-known author to followers of the environmental, simple living, and anarchist movements, although he did not strongly self-identify with any of these.[11]


Quinn traveled widely to lecture and discuss his books. While response to Ishmael was mostly very positive, Quinn's ideas have inspired the most controversy with a claim mentioned in Ishmael but made much more forcefully in The Story of B's Appendix that the total human population grows and shrinks according to food availability and with the catastrophic real-world conclusions he draws from this.[12]


In 1998, Quinn collaborated with environmental biologist Alan D. Thornhill in producing Food Production and Population Growth, a video elaborating in-depth the science behind the ideas he describes in his fiction.[13]


Quinn's book Tales of Adam was released in 2005 after a long bankruptcy scuffle with its initial publisher. It is designed to be a look through the animist's eyes in seven short tales; Quinn first explores the idea of animism as the original worldwide religion and as his own dogma-free belief system in The Story of B and his autobiography, Providence: The Story of a Fifty-Year Vision Quest.[7]


In February 2018, Quinn died of aspiration pneumonia in hospice care.[9]

Takers and Leavers — "Takers" refers to members of the dominant civilization and its culture, while "Leavers" refers to members of the countless other non-civilized cultures existing both in the past and currently.[14][20][31] Quinn later regretted these terms, supposing that "hierarchical" and "tribal," respectively, may be better alternatives.[32]

globalized

 – a personification of any culture's inherently biased influences that are not perceived as biased by its members[33]

Mother Culture

Food Race – the phenomenon of ongoing and its accompanying global catastrophes, in which the giving of more food to starving, growing populations paradoxically yields only still greater population growth and starvation[12][34]

human overpopulation

Law of limited competition – a that "defines the limits of competition in the community of life," according to which "you may compete to the full extent of your capabilities, but you may not hunt down your competitors or destroy their food or deny them... access to food in general," meaning across-the-board;[35] species that violate this law end up extinct

biological law

 – the universal collection of all evolutionarily stable strategies

Law of Life

Totalitarian Agriculture – today's dominant form of agriculture that "subordinates all other life-forms to the relentless, single-minded production of human food," unsustainable because it generates enormous food supplies that in turn generate ever-greater human population booms

[20]

 – widespread historical ignorance regarding "the fact that we [humans] are a biological species in a community of biological species and are not exempt or exemptible from the forces that shape all life on this planet; this also includes our forgetting of the fact that most of human history has been based on an ecologically sound way of life (largely hunting and gathering)"[36]

The Great Forgetting

 – "a metaphor for so many circumstances in life when people are unwilling or unable to react effectively to crises that occur very gradually or imperceptibly,"[37] used especially by Quinn to refer to creeping normality in terms of escalating environmental degradation

Boiling frog

 – a hypothetical, sociocultural period of global change that Quinn supports, in which civilization would gradually begin to transform into a collection of more sustainable, tribally-organized societies[6]

New Tribal Revolution

Influence[edit]

Ishmael directly inspired the 1998 Pearl Jam album Yield (and particularly the song "Do the Evolution"),[44] and the Chicano Batman song "The Taker Story" on their 2017 album Freedom is Free.[45] In 2019 The Mammals, a folk band including Mike Merenda & Ruth Ungar, released Nonet with many of the songs on it inspired by Ishmael and other Quinn books, most especially Beyond Civilization.[46] North Carolina's vegan hardcore band Undying has been heavily influenced by the work of Daniel Quinn.[47]


Quinn's writings have also influenced the filmmaker Tom Shadyac (who featured Quinn in the documentary I Am); the entrepreneur Ray C. Anderson, founder of Interface, Inc. (the world's largest manufacturer of modular carpet), who began transforming Interface with more green initiatives;[48] as well as some of the ideology behind the 1999 drama film Instinct,[3] and the 2007 documentary film What A Way To Go: Life at the End of Empire. Playwright Derek Ahonen has cited Quinn as the foremost influence on his play, The Pied Pipers of The Lower East Side, which attempts to dramatize the philosophies of New Tribalism. [49]


Actor Morgan Freeman's interest in the Ishmael trilogy inspired his involvement with nature documentaries, such as Island of Lemurs: Madagascar and Born to Be Wild, both of which he narrated, while adopting from Quinn the phrase "the tyranny of agriculture".[50][51] Punk rock band Rise Against includes Ishmael on their album The Sufferer & the Witness' reading list,[52] and its sequel, My Ishmael, inspired the name of the band Animals as Leaders.[53]

(1982) The Book of the Damned Part One, Part Two and Part Three Hard Rain Press, PO Box 5495, Santa Fe, NM 87502  9781499149999

ISBN

(1988) CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform ISBN 9781481850063

Dreamer

(1992) , Bantam, ISBN 0553375407

Ishmael

(1996) , Bantam, ISBN 0553379011

The Story of B

(1996) (autobiography), Bantam, ISBN 0553375490

Providence: The Story of a 50 Year Vision Quest

(1997) , Bantam, ISBN 0553379658

My Ishmael

(1997) A Newcomer's Guide to the Afterlife (with ), Bantam, ISBN 0553379798

Tom Whalen

(1999) An Animist Testament ( of Quinn reading The Tales of Adam and The Book of the Damned)

audio cassette

(2000) , Broadway Books, ISBN 0609805363

Beyond Civilization

(2001) The Man Who Grew Young ( with Tim Eldred), Context, ISBN 1893956172

graphic novel

(2001) , Steerforth, ISBN 1581952155

After Dachau

(2002) , Steerforth, ISBN 1581952147

The Holy

(2005) Tales of Adam, Steerforth,  1586420747

ISBN

(2006) Work, Work, Work, Steerforth, ISBN

(2007) If They Give You Lined Paper, Write Sideways, Steerforth,  1586421263

ISBN

(2010) Moral Ground: Ethical Action for a Planet in Peril. (chapter) and Kathleen Dean Moore (eds.). Trinity University Press, ISBN 9781595340665

Nelson, Michael P.

(2012) At Woomeroo, CreateSpace,  1477599975

ISBN

(2014) The Invisibility of Success, CreateSpace,  1494930935

ISBN

(2014) The Teachings, CreateSpace,  1502356155

ISBN

Malthusianism

New tribalists

Population growth

Ecological overshoot

(PDF). Tony Stebbing. American Journal of Human Biology 23:826–830 (2011), Cambridge University Press, 2011.

"A Cybernetic View of Biological Growth: The Maia Hypothesis"

 – The Ishmael community, Daniel Quinn's official website

Ishmael.org

The Friends of Ishmael Society

 – a website devoted to encouraging people to read Ishmael

Read Ishmael

 – thinking about Ishmael

Ishthink.org

on YouTube

Archived videos