In “Tales From a Black Girl on
Fire, Or Why I Hate to Walk Outside and See Things Burning” by Camille T Dungy
we see a writer discuss nature in an unusual way, where instead of a nostalgic,
idealized portrait of nature, we get a view of nature heavily mediated by fear.
Dungy makes it clear that experiencing the outdoors has always been a cherished
part of her life, but that at certain times she cannot be in nature without a
profound sense of anxiety permeating the experience. The key seems to be
geography and history: “During my years I lived in Virginia , I occupied several historical
planes at once. I lived my personal experience of a community that was legally
desegregated and essentially welcoming; but I also lived my mother’s and grandparents’
pre-civil rights era experience” (Dungy 29). She has made an unignorable association, a conflation
between fire and violence/terror, between a geographical landscape and the evil
events that have taken place there. So to Dungy, environment is in fundamental
ways not separable from the human life that has gone on there, and nature takes
on an imprint—emotional, psychic, energetic—of these events that she can feel
and which are as real as the immediate plane of physical existence.
Another layer of her fear is
directly tied to environment: having grown up in Southern California, “Where
the spark from a campfire, a stray cigarette, or an insect burned under a
magnifying glass could ignite a firestorm that burned a hundred homes, scorched
innocent animals and demolished thousands of acres of habitat,” Dungy is
conditioned to the idea of fire as destroyer (Dungy 31). This destruction of
landscape translates from the West Coast to the East as tool of destruction of
people who are powerless in the face of racial hatred. Environment, then, both as
external habitat, and the denizens of it, shapes us, our perceptions of the
world, our fears, our interests. And we shape each other, as history makes an
imprint on the landscape that becomes the legacy passed on to future
generations who live on the same ground.
“Touching on Skin” by Kimiko Hahn I
felt was very interesting to read after the Dungy piece because it provided a
different nonfiction form; it’s short, spaced apart paragraphs and use of
parentheses and dashes make it feel more like poetry than an essay. Hahn tell
us: “I depend on my skin. On this wall. This pigeonhole. This frontier” (Hahn
158). Skin, biologically, is protection; it is also our way of interfacing
physically with the outside world and gives us much information about
environment. It also gives people much information about us (whether truths or
assumptions made erroneously) and can open doors or shut them in some
situations. It can be a site for pain, or pleasure. And it can be a place where
we feel at home and we can carry that sense of home with us where ever we go.
“At the End of Ridge Road” by
Joseph Bruchac presents a more common depiction of nature than Dungy’s piece,
but that does not make it inferior or any less heart felt. I really enjoyed the
section about the turtles because they are fascinating creatures that are
common enough to be well known, but uncommon enough to be a treat when you
actually see one. I very much enjoyed Bruchac’s blend of Native American
storytelling—the painted turtle got its stripes by getting ready to go to war, turtles have thirteen large plates on their backs to reflect the lunar
cycles, turtles enables the formation of North America—and his scientific knowledge about plants and animals (and most of all,
his assertion that they are not mutually exclusive). Bruchac is a
preservationist: of the environment, of the animals who live there and are
threatened by modern civilization, of the Native American stories and culture
that are part (but only part) of his racial heritage and his writing serves to
further preserve these things he sees and experiences for which he cares
deeply.
Great post! It was nice to read about Dungy's depiction of nature and then how you related the other stories back to it. The thread of environment and the stories it has to offer is definitely an interesting one. Thanks :)
ReplyDeleteall great observations, Amanda. you find the thread in each and in Hahn that thread is both the content and the construct. Each leads to a sense of identity about the narrator (or at least some sense of identity) and where we go with that is deeper
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I appreciate your response to Hahn very much. After reading that I piece I found I was left with a strong feeling, but without the words to describe why I had such a reaction. I agree, it was interesting to read after the Dungy piece. Something about the focus on protection, or even just the introspection, in Hahn's pieces versus what it is that causes fear in Dungy's resonated with me.
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