Answer:
Gary Snyder's poetry addresses the life-planet identification with unusual simplicity of style and complexity of effect this simplicity and complexity derives from Snyder's use of natural imagery (geographical formations, flora, and fauna) in his poems. Such imagery can be both sensual at a personal level yet universal and generic in nature
Explanation:Snyder has always maintained that his personal sensibility arose from his interest in Native Americans and their involvement with nature and knowledge of it; indeed, their ways seemed to resonate with his own. And he has sought something akin to this through Buddhist practices. Snyder saw humankind as part of nature. Snyder rejects the perspective which portrays nature and humanity in direct opposition to one another.
There are many tasks The Practice of the Wild takes on. At its heart, it is a book about what happened to us, meaning how we pulled ourselves so far from a lived connection to lived landscapes. In that way, it's a kind of history of human beings and their relationship to land and life. But before he begins that history, Snyder also lays out distinctions between nature, wild and wilderness.