Whether referring to a place, a nonhuman animal or plant, or a state of mind, wild indicates autonomy and agency, a will to be, a unique expression of life. Yet two contrasting ideas about wild nature permeate contemporary discussions: either that nature is most wild in the absence of a defiling human presence, or that nature is completely humanised and nothing is truly wild.
Wildness: Relations of People and Place charts a different path. Exploring how people can become attuned to the wild community of life and also contribute to the well-being of the wild places in which we live, work, and play, Wildness brings together esteemed authors from a variety of landscapes, cultures, and backgrounds to share their stories about the interdependence of everyday human lifeways and wildness. As they show, far from being an all or nothing proposition, wildness exists in variations and degrees that range from cultivated soils to multigenerational forests to sunflowers pushing through cracks in a city alley. Spanning diverse geographies, these essays celebrate the continuum of wildness, revealing the many ways in which human communities can nurture, adapt to, and thrive alongside their wild nonhuman kin.
From the contoured lands of Wisconsin's Driftless region to remote Alaska, from the amazing adaptations of animals and plants living in the concrete jungle to indigenous lands and harvest ceremonies, from backyards to reclaimed urban industrial sites, from microcosms to bioregions and atmospheres, manifestations of wildness are everywhere. With Wildness: Relations of People and Place, we gain insight into what wildness is and could be, as well as how it might be recovered in our lives – and with it, how we might unearth a more profound, wilder understanding of what it means to be human.
Wildness: Relations of People and Place is published in association with the Center for Humans and Nature, an organisation that brings together some of the brightest minds to explore and promote human responsibilities to each other and the whole community of life.
Introduction: Into the Wildness
Gavin Van Horn
Part 1. Wisdom of the Wild
1. Wildfire News
Gary Snyder
2. Conundrum and Continuum: One Man’s Wilderness, from a Ditch to the Dark Divide
Robert Michael Pyle
3. No Word
Enrique Salmón
4. The Edge of Anomaly
Curt Meine
5. Order versus Wildness
Joel Salatin
6. Biomimicry: Business from the Wild
Margo Farnsworth
7. Notes on “Up at the Basin”
David J. Rothman
Part 2. Working Wild
8. Listening to the Forest
Jeff Grignon and Robin Wall Kimmerer
9. The Working Wilderness
Courtney White
10. The Hummingbird and the Redcap
Devon G. Peña
11. Losing Wildness for the Sake of Wilderness: The Removal of Drakes Bay Oyster Company
Laura Alice Watt
12. Inhabiting the Alaskan Wild
Margot Higgins
13. Wilderness in Four Parts, or Why We Cannot Mention My Great-Grandfather’s Name
Aaron Abeyta
Part 3. Urban Wild
14. Wild Black Margins
Mistinguette Smith
15. Healing the Urban Wild
Gavin Van Horn
16. Building the Civilized Wild
Seth Magle
17. Cultivating the Wild on Chicago’s South Side: Stories of People and Nature at Eden Place Nature Center
Michael Bryson and Michael Howard
18. Toward an Urban Practice of the Wild
John Tallmadge
Part 4. Planetary Wild
19. The Whiskered God of Filth
Rob Dunn
20. The Akiing Ethic: Seeking Ancestral Wildness beyond Aldo Leopold’s Wilderness
John Hausdoerffer
21. On the Wild Edge in Iceland
Brooke Hecht
22. The Story Isn’t Over
Julianne Lutz Warren
23. Cultivating the Wild
Vandana Shiva
24. Earth Island: Prelude to a Eutopian History
Wes Jackson
Epilogue: Wild Partnership: A Conversation with Roderick Frazier Nash
John Hausdoerffer
Acknowledgments
Permissions
About the Contributors
Index
Gavin Van Horn is the director of Cultures of Conservation for the Center for Humans and Nature, a nonprofit organization that focuses on and promotes conservation ethics. He is coeditor of City Creatures: Animal Encounters in the Chicago Wilderness, also published by the University of Chicago Press. He lives in Evanston, IL. John Hausdoerffer is a fellow for the Center for Humans and Nature as well as the executive director of the Center for Environment & Sustainability at Western State Colorado University, where he is professor of environmental sustainability and philosophy and directs the Master in Environmental Management Program. He is the author of Catlin's Lament: Indians, Manifest Destiny, and the Ethics of Nature and editor of Aaron Abeyta's Letters from the Headwaters. He lives in Gunnison, CO.
"This amazing amalgam goes at the issue of nature, wildness, and our relationships to it via personal story, lyrical verse, and reflection. It is a return to something that works most effectively – a diversity of noteworthy voices tuned to a single issue – but that is so diverse in its assemblage and affect as to be totally unique and useful. Comprehensive, inclusive, and evocative, comfortable enough to be considered literature but groundbreaking enough to enter into discussions of policy and planning for the future, Wildness is storytelling and word-singing at its best. It is also a book I simply (and badly) want on my bookshelf to pull down and read words that flow like water but have the lasting impact of fire."
– J. Drew Lanham, Clemson University, author of The Home Place: Memoirs of a Colored Man's Love Affair with Nature
"An impressively thoughtful and artful collection. The pieces in Wildness are engaging and often lyrical, maintaining a kind of authorial intimacy throughout; collectively they work well to advance the book's timely theme of the wild as a human condition. Brimming with strong and original voices, this is a top-flight anthology that takes an old idea and makes it new, hip, and fresh."
– Ben A. Minteer, Arizona State University, coeditor of After Preservation: Saving American Nature in the Age of Humans