Delight Springs

Monday, November 2, 2020

Wendell Berry

LISTEN. We had a nice weekend up on Monteagle Mountain, amid the turning and rustling leaves. It would have been nice to suspend time there a little longer, to postpone whatever's about to happen tomorrow (and tomorrow and tomorrow) and get a little more perspective on these strange days. Stop the merry-go-round etc. But time marches on, the sun is up again, there are votes still to cast and count and lessons to learn.

I spent some time on the mountain with Wendell Berry, whose steadiness and sanity are tonic. Why don't people like him run for president? Could have something to do with their steadiness and sanity.


The rare interview he did with Bill Moyers a few years ago, featuring film footage of Berry and friends occupying the Kentucky governor's office to protest mountaintop removal and other environmental atrocities, is a delight and an inspiration. "We don't have a right to ask whether we're going to succeed or not. The only thing we have a right to ask is, what's the right thing to do?" 

In his 2016 talk at Johns Hopkins Berry said "the concept of limitlessness is a fantasy, and so is the notion that we can have limitless economic growth. The concepts of enough and plenty have been replaced with 'all you can get' and 'all you can make.'"

His advice to settle in somewhere and really understand what it means to have and love a home-place, to set a worthy example and contribute to the expansion of the meaning of home for those who follow us , is golden. 

From the latest collection of Berry's essays, The World-Ending Fire

“Our understandable wish to preserve the planet must somehow be reduced to the scale of our competence-that is to wish to preserve all of its humble households and neighborhoods.”

“Our human and earthly limits, properly understood, are not confinements but rather inducements to formal elaboration and elegance, to fullness of relationship and meaning.” GBks

The Library of America has also issued two compendious editions of his nonfiction.

And of course there are all those novels and poems and short stories. 

There's also a bio called Wendell Berry and the Given Life, with a foreword from Bill McKibben. Berry is religious in a way I am not, but I think his form of spirituality is not restrictive. Pantheists, humanists, and naturalists (among others) can all agree that we're "creatures" whether we affirm a creator or not.

We have room for another text or two in Environmental Ethics, before the Fall semester concludes. If the class is up for it, we could all use a little more steadiness and sanity. Send more Wendell Berry. (Chuck too.)


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