
Daniel Quinn speaks during a 1998 talk, ''Food Production & Population Growth''.
'Daniel Quinn' (born
1935 in
Omaha, Nebraska) is a
U.S. writer. He is best known for his book ''
Ishmael'' (1992), which won the
Turner Tomorrow Fellowship Award in 1991.
Biography
Daniel Quinn received an education at three universities:
Saint Louis University,
University of Vienna,
Austria, and
Loyola University.
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'' is roughly based on the 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. As of 2006, he appears to be traveling less frequently, perhaps because of health issues.
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, food aid to impoverished nations merely puts off and dramatically worsens a massive population-environment crisis.
Quinn has replied with a modified version of some of
Thomas Malthus's arguments, suggesting that current population growth is unsustainable both for human beings and other species, and that apparently benevolent policies now will wreak havoc when considered from a longer-term view. As evidence of this, he points to the extinction of 200 species a day currently being caused by human beings. Quinn has also suggested that the low fertility rates of developed nations are irrelevant as counter-evidence to his thesis, because the growing food production of developed nations is what is driving population growth in the
Third World.
Quinn repeatedly states in his books that he speaks to a population as a whole, and not some artificial subsection (say, Germany). His argument is simple: more food, more humans. Not necessarily more humans in Nebraska, for example, but wherever the extra food from Nebraska is going. His argument rests on the physical fact that more food eaten directly translates to more human mass. He specifically states that starvation in problem areas is not necessary provided the extra humans are moved to areas that can sustain them. He objects to food aid that simply keeps an already unsustainable population growing.
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.
Across the United States and the world, dozens or even hundreds of local groups have formed to discuss Quinn's ideas. It is unclear how many of these groups are currently in active existence. A guide to these groups can be found on Quinn's website.
Related authors include
Derrick Jensen,
Jared Diamond,
Jack Forbes,
Edward Goldsmith,
Morris Berman, and
Fredy Perlman.
Quinn currently lives in Houston, Texas with his wife Rennie.
Bibliography
★ (1988) ''
Dreamer''
★ (1992) ''
Ishmael''
★ (1996) ''
The Story of B''
★ (1997) ''
My Ishmael''
★ (1997) ''
A Newcomer's Guide to the Afterlife'' (with Tom Whalen)
★ (1996) '' (autobiography)
★ (1999) ''
An Anamist 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
★
Beyond Ishmael - Forum to discuss Ishmael/Quinn related ideas and books.
★
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 - online community inspired by ''Ishmael''
★
Ishmael and B Community
★
Quinn Forums - a forum to discuss Daniel Quinn's novels and ideas