episode six: language

– artivist_ran

In episode six, I spoke with Dr Daniel Finch-Race, a teaching fellow at the University of Bristol and a research fellow at the University of Venice; whose academic work sits at a crossroads between the Environmental Humanities, language and history. He works namely with French and Italian, challenging the idea that the climate crisis is an issue expressed solely in the English language. We examine the role of language in constructing meaning, and more broadly, the narratives that define our place in the world. We explore the arts as a kind of language, and Daniel’s interest in the languages of the visual, of film and paintings, that require attention as their own kind of vital storytelling.

As we converse in English, we reflect on the primacy of the English language, and the politics of translating other languages and worldviews; considering the urgency of a diverse and plural response to a changing global environment.

A principal called linguistic relativity (also known as the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis), holds that language affects the very ways in which its respective speakers conceptualize their entire world, in short their cognitive processes which often inform their actions.

– The Bureau of Linguistical Reality

Thus ways of life are, to a large extent, manifestations of concepts—of the ideas they foster and the possibilities of action.

reading list six: Daniel Finch-Race

Braiding Sweetgrass, Robin Wall Kimmerer

If Black English Isn’t a Language, Then Tell Me, What Is?, James Baldwin |link|

French Ecocriticism: From the Early Modern Period to the Twenty-First Century, Daniel Finch-Race & Stephanie Posthumus |link|

Engaging with Cultural Differences: The Strange Case of French écocritique, Stephanie Poshumus |link|

The Language of the Master, Paul Kingsnorth |link|

Earth Emotions: New Words for a New World, Glenn Albrecht

Toni Morrison on the Power of Language |link|

Earth Does Not Speak In Prose, Paul Kingsnorth |link|

A Life Worthy of Our Breath – The On Being Project with Ocean Vuong |link|

Ursula K. Le Guin on Art, Storytelling, and the Power of Language to Transform and Redeem |link|

Relatively speaking: do our words influence how we think? |link|

On the Poverty of Our Nomenclature, Eileen Crist |link|

Living Lexicon for the Environmental Humanities |link|

The Bureau of Linguistical Reality |link|

Qapirangajuq: Inuit Knowledge and Climate Change, FILM : |link|

Engaging with Cultural Differences: The Strange Case of French ecocritique,Stephanie Posthumus |link|

Speaking English with Country: Can the animate world hear us? Can we hear it?, Geoff Berry |link|

Ecolinguistics: the state of the art and future horizons, Sune Vork Steffensen & Alwin Fill |link|


Outro: Excerpt from Donna Haraway , It Matters What Stories Tell Stories; It Matters Whose Stories Tell Stories

episode two: rewilding

In the second episode of the series, I spoke with Dr Paul Jepson, a conservationist and former director of the MSc in Biodiversity, Conservation and Management at Oxford University. Paul now works as the Nature Recovery lead at Ecosulis Ltd, (http://www.ecosulis.co.uk/ ) an ecological consultancy based outside of Bath.

Rewilding has become a buzzword in conversations around conservation and progressive ecological thinking. Most fundamentally, the term sits in an emerging debate around how we value and use land, and ultimately at what ecological cost. Rewilding might be a contemporary movement in the UK, but its contention is caught up in a long history of land enclosure, agriculture and private ownership. As Paul illustrates, there is a huge amount of potential in reforming the way land is used at present, which could directly address issues like climate change and biodiversity loss. Outside of conservation debates, the imaginary of rewilding grows increasingly influential in discussions around art, language and politics.

This reading list was fascinating to compile, a combination of policy papers, debates and ideas that constitute present narratives around rewilding land. When I asked Paul which books have inspired him as a thinker, he responded with The Inevitable by Kevin Kelly and An Arid Eden by Garth Owen-Smith. See more of Paul’s writing on his website: http://www.pauljepson.com/

From ‘Feral’, George Monbiot

reading list 2: Paul Jepson

Recoverable Earth: a twenty-first century environmental narrative, Paul Jepson: |link|

Rewilding isn’t about nostalgia- exciting new worlds are possible, Paul Jepson: |link|

New pastoralism”: a vision to revitalise our national parks, Paul Jepson: |link|

Rewilding: Science, Practice and Politics |link|

Time to walk the talk, Paul Jepson |link|

State of Nature report (UK, 2019) |link|

A short history of land enclosure in Britain: |link|

What were the Highland Clearances and why do they matter? |link|

Lochlaber No More (1883), John Watson Nichol [painting]

Proving the ‘shifting baselines’ theory: how humans consistently misperceive nature: |link|

The Inevitable, Kevin Kelly

A Sand County Almanac, Aldo Leopold

An Arid Eden, Garth Owen-Smith

Sapiens, Yuval Noah Harari

Lost river returns to Somerset 70 years after it dried up, Alex Morss: |link|

Beavers to be released in plan to ease flooding and aid biodiversity, Steven Morris |link|

Reclaiming the Commons, Guy Shrubsole with George Monbiot |link|

Who owns England? History of England’s land ownership and how much is privately owned today: |link|

A rewilding agenda for Europe: creating a network of experimental reserves, Paul Jepson: |link|

Summit to Sea ( Mynydd i’r Môr ), |link| [project]

Wilding: The Return of Nature to a British Farm, Isabella Tree

The word-hoard: rewilding the language of landscape, Robert Macfarlane |link|

Feral: Searching for Enchantment on the Frontiers of Rewilding, George Monbiot

Waterlog: A Swimmer’s Journey Through Britain, Roger Deakin

Wolf reintroduction in Scotland (2018): |link|

The uneasy return of Europe’s wolves, Patrick Barkham |link|

How rewilding reduces flood risk (2016), Rewilding Britain report: |link|

Bears and wolves to coexist in UK woods for first time in 1,000 years (2019), The Guardian: |link|

Rewilding Australia’: not only do we need the outback, the outback needs us, Barry Traill and John Woinarski: |link|

Accidental Rewilding in Slovenia, George Monbiot |link|

Abandoning or Reimagining a Cultural Heartland? Understanding and Responding to Rewilding Conflicts in Wales – the case of the Cambrian Wildwood. |link|

Flight Ways: Life and Loss at the Edge of Extinction, Thom Van Dooren

Humankind: Solidarity with Non-Human People, Timothy Morton

Creative approaches to rewilding, Anna Souter |link|

Rewilding the Exhibition? Anna Souter |link|

A sonic rewilding with Nest Collective & Extinction Rebellion: The Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square |link| [event]


Intro excerpt: How to Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy, Jenny Odell

Outro excerpt: The Mushroom at the End of the World, Anna Tsing