Resistance - by Barry Lopez
Published July 06, 2004
Barry Lopez was honoured for his nature writing with an American National Book Award for "Arctic Dreams" in 1986 and a nomination for "Of Wolves and Men". His talent and power are undisputable. He captures nature scenes with visual and sensory precision, and sheer beauty. His essays, collected in books like "About This Life," explore the beauty and complexity of living in the natural world.
He takes nature writing very seriously. In an online essay at http://www.lopezbooks.com/articles/lopez.html he wrote that nature writing is the "... strain of American literature that, more than others now, is pursuing the ancient discourse on human fate".
A Google search brings up articles in which deep ecologists claim Lopez as a living saint of their movement. In published interviews, he suggests that he does not see himself as a Green evangelist, and explains his abiding belief in the power of story - narrative and imagination - to communicate the meaning of living, as a thinking and spiritual person, in the natural world.
He writes with a conscience, examining the impact nature on human life, and the impact of human activity on wilderness. He also drifts into a kind of dreamy post-modern mysticism. There is a definite philosophical slant towards the natural and the primitive in his writing, accompanied by post-modernist snobbery against American culture.
While some people take that kind of thing seriously, I find it to be elitist and condescending.
"Resistance" is presented as a work of fiction, in nine short stories. In the first story, titled "Resistance", the narrator Owen Daniels is a curator and writer, part of a loose international group of writers, artists, and scholars. They receive letter from an agency called the Office of Inland Security denouncing for terrorizing the imaginations of their fellow citizens. While Lopez doesn't mention Senator Joe McCarthy, he invokes an atmosphere of cultural war by American corporate interests against art, nature, history, and indigenous cultures, in the name of safety, profit, and progress.
The members of the group all decide to disappear before they are arrested. Each leaves behind an autobiographical story to explain what led them to resist the conventional and the comfortable. The eight stories that follow "Resistance" are polished meditations on interesting lives, in strange and wonderful places, filled with a a sense of mission and purpose, written with erudition and elegance.
- Resistance - by Barry Lopez
- Published: July 06, 2004
- Type:
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: Spirituality, Books: Outdoors, Books: Literature and Fiction
- Writer: Tony Dalmyn
- Tony Dalmyn's BC Writer page
- Tony Dalmyn's personal site
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Actually in the University of Kentucky library the other day I was browsing the latest government categorizations of domestic terrorist groups and they included many environmental and animal activist groups. Surely you are not so naive as to think that the current government doesn't pose a threat to environmental conditions and that they don't view environmental activists as threats?
If anything Wendell, as much as I respect him, shows entirely a much higher level of comtempt for American culture as we know it, only he cloaks it in agrarian romanticism that provides us with something to grasp onto as he spits in our face.
I agree though that Terry Tempest Williams has a much higher level of concern and response-ability in her attempts at communicating to the masses. I loaned Red to a young friend--that year she took off for Utah to hike the back country.
Thanks for the review--I think I'll look for the book