Novelist, essayist and poet Wendell Berry is a kind
of living icon for Christian writers and environmentalists, especially “crunchy
cons,” those conservative Christian believers who eagerly and rather
joyfully embrace an environmentalist ethic (and I would have to count myself
among that number, at least to some degree). There are good reasons for his
iconic status.
First, Berry is a fine writer and a fine poet. His work
embraces a considerable body of novels, short stories, poetry and essays.
Second, Berry is a writer who happens to be a Christian, and
his faith is not an obstacle for readers and critics who don’t share it.
Third, his writing is all of a piece, a coherent worldview
and way of understanding the world. It is a worldview with deep roots in the
American agrarian tradition, a reverence for the land and a reverence for the
human connection to the land. And that reverence leads to what Berry sees as
the contemporary “disconnect” between the vast majority of people and the land,
the source of physical and even spiritual sustenance. From Berry’s book of
poems A Timbered Choir (1998):
I have again come home
through miles of sky
from hours of abstract talk
in the way of modern time.
When humans live in their minds
and the world, forgotten, dies
into explanations. Weary
with absence, I return to earth.
A Timbered Choir
contains some of Berry’s most articulated environmental views, as least as he
expresses them in poetry form. These views are more pronounced, sharper, even darker
in Leavings: Poems (2010):
If we have become a people incapable
Of thought, then the brute-thought
Of mere power and mere greed
Will think for us…
Those who use the world assuming
their knowledge is sufficient
destroy the world…
Industrial humanity,
an alien species, lives by death.
What’s interesting is that Berry does not articulate some
concept of a return to nature, or “back to the woods;” instead, it is an
agrarian view of small farms and abandoned small farms, with trees growing
where fields were once tilled and planted, once-sturdy barns weathered and
collapsing, symbols of a people disconnected from their ancestral roots.
Berry develops these same themes and ideas in his novels and
short stories, and one compact place to see them all is in That Distant Land: The Collected Stories
(2004), which not only includes 23 short stories but stories arranged in
chronological order – not in the order they were written but in the order of
the time in which they fictionally occurred. (Berry’s seven novels are included
in the list to show as well where they fall in the overall story narrative.)
He tells wonderful stories, stories that are geographically
compact. They are all set in the fictional Port William region, in Kentucky
along the Ohio River across from Indiana. The stories explore both people and
the land, and how they interrelate, and Berry writes with both humor and
serious purpose. We meet people like Ptolemy Proudfoot and his wife Miss Minnie
when they are courting and when they are an old married couple; Elton Penn as
both a 12-year-old driving a Model A and a young farmer striving to create a
batter life for both his well-born wife and himself; Wheeler Catlett, who
“inherits” the care of his alcoholic Uncle Peach and later helps Elton Penn
gain ownership of a farm; and Uncle Peach himself, who we meet in a drunken
stupor in a Louisville hotel and eventually bid farewell to at his funeral.
(Wheeler as a boy and Uncle Peach made new appearances in a short story by
Berry published in the Oxford American Magazine last fall.)
And the land – the land is always a character in Berry’s
stories and poems, perhaps the main character. He writes about the land in
religious and Christian terms, using words like faith, resurrection, heaven and
Sabbath. “The land must have its Sabbath/or take it when we starve,” he writes
in A Timbered Choir.
And, Berry writes in his stories and poems, we moderns, we
“industrial aliens,” live cut off from the land, from our agrarian past.
Because of that, we have lost something, not just our history, but also
something of our very souls.
This article was
originally published by The Christian Manifesto, but the site was redesigned
and the archive (with all of my posts) disappeared. So I’m occasionally reposting
some of the articles I wrote for the publication.
3 comments:
Thank you Glynn. Berry is one of my go to poets. I have read mostly his poems but you and and another writer friend (who has a small working farm) have whetted my appetite for his stories.
i am glad,
yes, i am
of your reposting.
I got a chance to ask Joel Salatin for his thoughts on Wendell Berry, I thought you all might enjoy the video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wAxav-kuHps
Ben
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