For anyone who has experienced it,
getting ‘lost’ in the unique time and space of a college campus is one of the most energizing endorphin rushes available. I
suspect I’m addicted to that rush in the way I’m addicted to the endorphin rush
that happens with exercise. I was
thinking about this addiction as I was walking back from the café in the
Brothers College building. The café was
built into the already existing reading room, which has three walls of built in
book cases stacked with an ‘open library’.
Anyone is free to ‘borrow’ a book from the reading room, and I selected A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again,
by David Foster Wallace (one of those
most well known authors of the past thirty years that I’ve never read
before…and
who uses all three of his given
names – which, in classic Anglo-American form could be interchanged without any
notice: Wallace David Foster, Foster David Wallace, D.W. Foster, Foster Wallace
David, etc.) I suppose I’m at the point
where I’m ‘ready’ to read him, perhaps now that he’s dead…and that was in no way meant to be snarky, nor
insensitive, and, on the contrary, is an expression of self-criticism, and my
habit of reading ‘dead’ authors, and mostly authors who have been ‘dead’ for
hundreds and even thousands of years.
The more ‘dead’ the author, the more alive they become to me…for
whatever reason, but probably something having to do with my childhood
experiences with ancient religion and philosophy, which lead me to feel that
the magic happens when we encounter the words from the past, and step into
another world. Something like that…
So I got ‘lost’ a bit during my
break, and this continued when I returned to the library, and walked through
the open stacks – I read the Drew library policy earlier today, because I was
feeling a built like an interloper and wanted to confirm I was, in fact,
‘welcome’ to work in the library…and I can, so long as I understand the policy,
and qualify as a ‘visitor’, whatever that means…the policy identifies the
library as having ‘open stacks’ that are ‘open’ to any ‘visitor’…and I
appreciated that, because there are many libraries that have ‘closed’
stacks…and exist behind guarded doors, such as the Bodleian in Oxford -- and as I was walking through the stacks I
came across a book on the philosophy in literature, which caught my
attention. No surprise, the book
included two chapters on Sartre, with one taking up No Exit, which I referred to yesterday in my blog commentary when I
was bemoaning the presence of other
people who were intruding upon my solitude in the wilderness. So much for solitude and wilderness! Truth is that I had ample solitude alongside
the other people who happened to share the spot in Dunnfield Creek falls, a
perfect spot to experience the phenomenology of the forest! Reading a few paragraphs from the piece on No Exit, I thought of Frank’s talk from
last Thursday at TC, with its critique of the discourse of responsibility, and
my reticence to respond via Sartre, opting instead for the safe and more
diplomatic internal critique: posing his use of Merleu-Ponty’s phenomenology
against his use of Maldonado-Torres’ militant decolonial theory. I’ll have to bring up Sartre when I
reconvene with Frank in Memphis in a few weeks.
Talk of getting ‘lost’ on the
campus – and this is a more general way of describing what Tyson calls
‘study’…more or less – leads me to some words I’d like to write in response to
a public art installation on the Drew campus. New Growth
I’d noticed
these…small…billboards?...when I returned to campus last week for the first
time since May. My first impression of
the billboards…signs?...was to understand them as part of a Welcome Back
ritual, a whimsical greeting for new and returning students, prompting them
to...???...not sure exactly…in fact, I recall thinking that it was part of a
game, a scavenger hunt perhaps, for the first year students. (My daughter Sofia
had experienced something like that on her first night at Bates, so I was
projecting, no doubt) I hardly noticed
the…signs…game pieces???....when I returned to campus. The regal oaks that make up the ‘forest’ on
this campus, those I continue to admire in a reverentially way. But the…game pieces…those faded into the
background. Until I returned to the
library, and happened to look at a table with the latest notices, campus
papers, etc. What caught my eyes, at
first, was a notice from Passaic Community College announcing the Allen
Ginsburg poetry contest, which will award $1000 to the first place winner! A hefty sum for a work of poetry, I would
say. My eyes moved to the postcard of Anne
Percoco’s New Growth installation,
and those…game pieces, signs, billboards…suddenly came back into my field of
perception…as works of art! But of course they should be works of art! And of course
they should re-appear in my field of perception the day after I wrote what felt
like a breath-through bit on the phenomenology of the forest; a breath-through
for me, as I was quick to point out yesterday, because I’m sure everyone who
I’ve spoken to in the past week about my struggle to describe the pine tree,
specifically those who know anything about phenomenology, were already hip to
the post-humanist turn around that has
to happen with a phenomenology of the forest:
es gibt (it gives). ‘It’ the forest, la selva. And la selva gives in more ways than one,
that’s for sure! (We don’t breathe if la selva doesn’t give us the air) So it gives, and it discloses, and it
offers, and in doing to we are translated…and here my dictionaries second
denotation of ‘translation’, as well as the etymology it presents, do some work
for me:
Translation
formal or technical
the process of moving something from one place to
another: the translation of the relics of St. Thomas of Canterbury.
• Mathematics
movement of a body from one point of space to another
such that every point of the body moves in the same direction and over the same
distance, without any rotation, reflection, or change in size.
ORIGIN
Middle English: from Old French, or from Latin
translatio(n-), from translat-
‘carried across’.
To be continued…what we might make
of ‘translation’ in the sense that Thoreau might mean it when talks of being
‘translated’ by Nature. I suspect the
roots of the word are helpful, and, what’s more, might connect well with my
interest in the ‘threshold’ and may be a way to describe the work of the
‘threshold scholar,’ the one who is ‘carried across’ by the force of the
phenomenology of the forest? That would
make a lot of change to the work I’ve
already done, which has been based in cultural temporalities. What’s more, my threshold scholar has been
depicted as one who ‘dwells’ in-between the clash of temporalities. Were he now to be denoted as such by his
being ‘carried over’ a threshold…that would mark a big shift…but one that would
resonate with the post-humanist move.
The post-card for Anne Percoco’s
installation describes the artist as being “interested in the intersection of
nature and culture, including the way humans represent plant life in
illustrations, advertisements and logos.”
[I’ll confess that I had to read the last word three times before I
understood is was not referring to Logos!] Her artworks are enlarged images Percoco
selected from advertisements printed in New York and New Jersey Yellow Pages
phone books. An ingenious move by
Percoco, given the anachronistic status of Yellow books. Perhaps the general illiteracy of the
wilderness is analogous to the demise of the Yellow book? But illiteracy is not the same as being
un-read. The deficit is of a different kind.
“Percoco enlarged these images and
digitally printed them onto plywood.
Although these sculptures look trees, function like trees (providing
shade and aesthetic appeal), and are made of trees, they are not trees.” Really?
Really? REALLY?!??!???!!!!!! Ok,
I’ll be polite…that’s what’s expected of us on the college campus, this farmers
market of ideas, where we trade in polite and diplomatic criticism; an
expectation that is even higher for the ‘guest’ and the ‘visitor’, which is why
I almost started this commentary with something along the lines of ‘There’s an old adage about not biting the
hand that feeds you…’ – yet register my critique at the risk
performing reductio ad absurdum: ‘They’
are not trees, first of all, because ‘they’ are the result of human processing
of said trees we are conjuring up; second, because ‘they’ are not trees
whatever it is that ‘they’ do (e.g.., providing shade and aesthetic appeal) is
so general an analogy to what trees ‘do’ that there’s no reason to compare them
to trees; third, to assign a function to trees is the grossest of all errors,
and one that I myself am probably most guilty of each and every time I write of
a ‘phenomenology of the forest’ and of being ‘translated’, etc. But there is an important difference in my
transgression, as opposed to the one committed by the author of the postcard
summary of Percoco’s installation, and, perhaps, by Percoco herself: I’m not assigning a function to trees for us (humans), but, rather assigning a function to us from trees. (Here’s where the reductio ad absurdum might be happening!) The difference is in the reversal happening
with the claim that we can learn from trees, which turns around the claim that
trees do something for us. It’s all a
matter of power: with the former we are
subjected to, and with the latter we
are subjecting our will over, which is precisely the will to dominate that
Heidegger writes about in the excerpt I cited a week ago in my commentary.
“…they are not trees. In fact, the use of chemically-treated wood
for a sculpture of a tree is clearly ironic, evoking the complexity of the
relationship between nature and culture and using public art to create dialogue
about environment concerns.”
Really? Really? REALLY?!??!???!!!!!! Again…being polite…Percoco’s installation
would be demonstrate or express irony if
she had placed alongside her pieces a can of the chemicals used for the wood
treatment. That would be especially
effective if the piece, along with the can of chemicals, was placed alongside
one of the oaks. Unfortunately I’ll miss
the panel discussion scheduled for next Monday that Anne Percoco is going to
moderate! Now that’s ironic, although, given my ‘visitors’ status, probably best
for all concerned parties.
The
penultimate day of the legend of Zarathustra…
“Rabbits bounded
upon the rolling mounds of turf that Zarathustra walked over as the serpentine
trail that wound north then south then north again taking him slowly up the
west side of the range. The din of the river receded into a steady murmur as he
climbed higher. Steadily the mist rose
and drifted south with lazy resignation.
The dread and abandonment he had felt from the clouds of unknowing in
the earliest hours of the day of his departure gave way to the detachment of one who has been assigned an uncommon, bold
and even desperate enterprise. Like the
mist, he was resigned to his fate, and maintained the bearing of humility. Eyes lowered, he felt the sun’s heat upon his
shoulders. ‘Rise brother, rise. Much will be revealed to you when the hours
of this day become few. Gone to the west
will I be when you reach this abode, but in the swell of my wake you will be
carried to the dwelling of the highest vision.’
Zarathustra opened his arms and sang to the sun:
‘Am I going to
disappear,
Like the withered
flowers?
How will my heart do
it?
Nothing will remain of
me?
At least poetry:
flower and song.’
“By
mid-morning he had ascended to a height where he could no longer hear the
river. The peaks appeared close enough
to touch with an extended reach. The
expanse of the forest rolled out and over and over the valley below. His vision of his past became increasingly
clearer with every new height reached.
He rested and looked back.
“Memory,
daughter of Heaven and Earth, sister of the Sun, made her appeal to the
climber. Memory rose and made her
epiphanic appeal as one in the company of stars that remains hidden in the
heavens, concealed by the glamorous glare of her brother. ‘You sing of peace and pleasure, and the
friendships forged here, in this now, in this present. Zarathustra already has the vision of the
East, of that enchanted region of mystery where he will descend in the evening
of his departure. My brother has offered
you the gift of hope, the grace received by those who are cradled and lifted
above the dark and foreboding abyss. The
unfolding event of the future, the not yet, is borne upon those who receive
this gift of hope as the ‘time to know our faces.’ You have sun the song that sings of the
fellowship forged upon the peace of friendship.
In the time you know your faces, you receive one another with the proper
reception of those who receive the gift of hope.
“Compassionate
is the listening that receives the voice of the other, the face of the
stranger. Together, then, in this
knowledge do you create a community that flourishes upon this earth, seeding
her with the songs of freedom that will be heard and sung again in the morning
after the day of your departure, in the day when you reap the harvest of peace. But forget not, Zarathustra, the paths you
have walked, nor the dwellings where you have abided. Remember your awakening, the opening of your
heart, the diminishment of your ego.
Hold close to you the recollections of your releasement from that remote
island of discontent. Remember each step
you have taken in this return from your solipsistic exile. These recollections appear in these songs you
sing, the stories you will convey in your speaking.
“Much will
you speak, much evocative saying will
you offer, Zarathustra, on the day, long after tomorrow’s tomorrow, when you
make your descent from that cave awaiting you on the eastern side of this
range. So long as you cling to this ‘I’
that dreads the withering of blossoms and the burning of buds, you will keep
close to that island from which you have been released. Sail forth upon this lake, and far from that
home where you have dwelled. Carry not
the fear of withering, but be carried by the cycle of life, this wheel upon
which you ride. Your songs, like the
nectar and pollen of the flowers, is carried away by others. The songs you have sun, shall indeed remain
real, and sustain This house of
poetic dwelling. Within This house you will dwell, always, so
long as you keep me close to your heart, remaining steadfast with the thoughts
and dreams of the passing days and nights.” (And so ends the teaching of
Memory, daughter of Heaven and Earth, to Zarathustra, as written ten years ago
this day, 09/15/04)
“Rabbits bounded upon the rolling mounds of turf that
Zarathustra walked over…” this is a reference to the rabbits that
abound on the Arthur’s Seat in Edinburgh.
Amongst the lasting memories I returned with after my trip to Scotland,
one of the most memorable was the hiking up and down Arthur’s Seat. When I did that in the dark of night, which
was never completely dark because there are no trees on the Seat, I was greeted
by the surreal scene of rabbits, rabbits and more rabbits bouncing here and
there and everywhere! These rabbits
found their way into the legend.
It appears to
be an indexical reference to Nietzsche, but I don’t know the source of the
fragment ‘time to know our faces.’ Evocative!
This house is
an indexical reference to the song ‘The Thought of the Sages’ from the Native Mesoamerican Spirituality. In an endnote I wrote: “There is an
important editorial move made with [my]
borrowing of the spiritual song ‘Let Us Enjoy Ourselves in the Here and Now.’ In order to emphasize the full force of the
temporal theme of the song, the word ‘His’ has been replaced with ‘This’… ‘His
house’ replaced for ‘This house.’
3.0 (Sunday, Portland, ME). So many memories packed into this 2.0 and the original writing. From Arthur's Seat in Edinburgh to Frank's talk at TC to the installation at Drew U! And I impatiently read all of that?! Because I'm still and perhaps always will be a bit impatient. And also because sometimes this 3.0 project is less project and more of a grind. Less blog, more slog! ;-). On the one hand, I admire my enthusiasm from 20 and 10 years ago, the desire to connect everything, and to notice what is happening in my experience. I still do that, but don't so much document it here. I am, however, as keenly caught up in the forests and trees, and even more so this summer than I was back in 2014, two years before we moved to 54 Garrison. There was hardly any yardwork to be done at 17 Kenwood, and I often said, "small house, big property, that's what I want." And my prayer was answered! When we moved in here the property was cared for in an imbalanced way. The previous ownders had a service pumping the lawn with fertilizer and pesticides, and it was lush in the front. But everywhere off the lawn was an overgrown mess. It took me a few years to find my footing, but once I got into it I started cutting back the mess, one summer, I think it was 2019, I carted off 8 pickup loads of brush to the dump! And then last summer I took on the invasive vine, the one that choked no fewer than 8 majestic white pines and a handful of other trees. According to my neighbor in the 40 years since he lived in his house no one had taken on the job of cutting the vine, which are nothing short of a cancer on the forest. So less prose, and even less poetry, and more work, hard work of cutting by hand saw, machete, lopper, and chain saw. I've save at least 5 white pine that were in the process of being choked, and more or less decimated the vine. This is the best kind of work I can imagine, and sometimes I wonder if I'd been really content being a professional arborist. The thought never ever crossed my mind, even though when I was studying at Fordham, in the middle of that concrete jungle called The Bronx, I often went to the fabulous Botanical Garden across the road. It's just that I also had affinity towards and a talent for writing and reading, and, anyway, the only kind of education I knew was the liberal arts, and the only options that were offered as legitimate were white collar professional jobs. My parents, especially my dad, were really snobby and kind of obnoxious towards laborers and contractors. They weren't out of step with the folks in the part of town I grew up in, and generally speaking, the upper middle class who live in and around the NYC Metro. That limited my sense of what was possible, and more so what was a "legitimate" way to make a living. So instead I'm an amateur arborist, and like many others, my home landscaping is a serious business, not to mention a fantastic way to get in a great sweat and work those muscles.
ReplyDeleteWhat does any of this have to do with "Being and Learning," or the tale of Zarathustra? Nothing, really, or not much at all, unless of course one takes seriously the implication of the title of the spiritual song, "Let Us Enjoy Ourselves in the Here and Now."