Planting Sweetgrass - Robin Kimmerer

ucla | Environ M30 | 2023-04-05T22:29


Table of Contents

Definitions


Big Ideas


Lecture

  • Skywoman Falling suggests humanity is exceptional from nature and has “descended upon” nature where the world introduces humanity to nature
  • reciprocity is crucial in terms of interacting with nature, how can we give back for the resources nature has given us
  • skywoman creates a garden and eats from it and. provides a blessing unto the world while in Genesis Eve is banished from the garden of eden for eating the fruit
  • the original indigenous woman upon earth was an immigrant - an exception to nature, and so she must learn to accommodate and reciprocate - the author is a member of an indigenous group and suggests humanity is similarly “thrown into the world”
  • so, the reciprocal interactions between humanity and nature is nature itself, one and independent - there is no

Are humans part of nature

  • Great Chan of Being suggests humans had their place in the natural order if God and Angels above them and animals below them
  • Darwinism and biological explanations ground ourselves scientifically into nature
  • in pagan and some Christian narratives, humans were originally “natural” - simple, innocent, happy but we then lost that connection when we developed society civilization: got us pat savagery but separated from nature

Ecology

  • the study of how organisms are distributed in space/time and why they are that way via they’re abundance and interactions with nature
  • the 1960’s pushed a movement/narrative that reenforced the idea that ecology s a more holistic synthesis than an analytical microscopy like the other sciences → used synonymously with environmentalism but was not true then and is not now, ecology is more the biological study of the dispersion and interactions of organisms
  • 1980s-1990s “Deep Ecology” Movement
    • rejected mainstream environmentalists like Sierra Club and Nature Conservancy
    • moved focus away from political push for change but instead focused on a belief system of non-human worth and pushed for human equivalency to nature (not exceptional beings)

Environmentalism(s) - many flavors

  • a social movement that emerged in thee middle of the 20th century (1960s during Civil Rights alongside feminism, anti-colonialism, etc.)
  • believe humanity is degrading, destroying, natural environments and aim to halt/reverse degradation
  • others want to preserve the environment for its own sake → invoke sense of “balance” between humanity and nature and living in harmony
  • many groups push against modernity, industrialization, capitalism, urbanization, etc. (mostly changed ca. 2000 with ecological modernists)
  • preceded by Romanticism with the realization that humanity threatens nature

Ecosystem

  • coined by Arthur Tansley in 1955 - a community of organisms and their symbiosis with non-living “neighbors”
  • BUT they are hard to identify/categorize especially with human developments (”novel ecosystem”)

Environment

  • broad term for natural and/or built environments, physical and meta-physical, etc.
  • connected to nature since conservationists of the 1960s → frees from the specificity of nature with a more encompassing term
  • can be a strength or weakness a a unifying term or a weekly defined specification

Resources


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