Arborilegium

Reading the trees

  • Politics & the Primeval Forest

    In Foresters, Borders, and Bark Beetles: The Future of Europe’s Last Primeval Forest we encounter foresters, scientists (one an eccentric aristocrat), a “man of the forest,” and activists. Each of four core chapters focuses on one of these figures, usually through a single person, and through their varied commitments to Białowieża, an ancient forest in eastern Poland at the border with Belarus. Eunice Blavascunas weaves the stories of these individuals with the historical background of the region, with attention especially to tensions—around class and national identity—in the post-Communist era. Blavascunas’s ethnographic research took place over more than two decades, so she has had a front row to the dramatic changes at the end of the twentieth century and in the first years of the twenty-first. Through her, we meet Simona Kossak, who kept a pet boar and argued for the rights of animals within the forest, and also the “post-peasant” Leszek, who declares himself so much a man of the forest that he could be dropped into it anywhere and know exactly where he is. For all Leszek’s claims about his intimate knowledge of Białowieża, however, Blavascunas has trouble getting him into the forest. And like Leszek, who seems to talk more about the forest than spend time within it, for much of the book Blavascunas keeps to the margins of “Europe’s last primeval forest.” I found myself a little frustrated that we didn’t get to know the mushroom, woodpeckers, bison (!) and Norway spruce better; the forest itself disappears against what it means for humans. The forest’s nonhuman claimants come to the fore in the sixth chapter: the spread of the bark beetle has led to confrontations over what the human response should be. For nationalists, “heavily logging Białowieża under the pretext of a bark beetle outbreak became a way to challenge the supremacy of the European Union and secular environmental activists” (154). On the other hand, for environmental activists “the bark beetle was a rewilding agent that let conservationists tell a forest narrative to counter the circulation of nationalist narratives” (167). As this drama unfolds, it becomes clear how the stories of the various stakeholders from the previous chapters come together in the present—and that environmental interventions depend on whose narrative about place is deemed most persuasive.

    I’m interested in how religious commitments influence views of nonhuman animals and plantlife, and although Blavascunas rightly centers political and ideological views in telling the story of Białowieża, the divide between Catholicism and Orthodox Christianity is also a shaping force. Perhaps more significant is the difference between a view of the forest as having its own agency and a view that instead sees at as created for human use. As an example of the latter, Blavascunas quotes a Catholic priest as characterizing the activists as working to “radically negate God as the creator of Poland, Poles and Polish women, animals, and plants” (172). The other side asserts that “the forest must be freed to become to what it will” (168), even if that means change that runs counter to what humans might want.

    In the introduction, Blavascunas characterizes Białowieża as “both pristine and imperiled, ‘already ruined’ and the best hope for knowing a ‘wild’ European forest” (8). This description, especially the first part, strikes me as true for many forests in other places. Moreover, what Blavascunas has shown very effectively is that perceptions of nature (as pristine, imperiled, ruined, wild) are deeply embedded in human histories and political identities.

  • It was their generosity that made them so lush and green

    Sheila Heti, Pure Colour: “She hadn’t known that plants were the grateful recipients of all consciousness—not only of people, but of snails and squirrels and the sun and the rain; that it was their generosity that made them so lush and green, the very colour of welcome. Was every tree so peppered with the consciousness of snails and squirrels and people and bees? And what will happen to her in the autumn? Is that when she will really be dead? No, perhaps then she’ll retreat into the trunk of the tree. Perhaps that’s what makes trees so magnificent: that as generous and accepting as their leaves are, their trunk is even more accepting. It welcomes one and all. Then the tree will let her slip out again, back through its branches as it buds in the spring. But what if the tree is cut down? Perhaps she’ll go into the next tree, then she’ll go into the next one, and she’ll just keep on going–into the soil or whatever’s left; particles from a distant sun.” (p. 98)

  • There are freedoms in woods

    “There are freedoms in woods that our ancestors perhaps realized more fully than we do. . . . This is the main reason I see trees, the wood, as the best analogue of prose fiction. All novels are also, in some way, exercises in attaining freedom—even when, at an extreme, they deny the possibility of its existence. Some such process of retreat from the normal world—however much the theme and surface is to be of the normal world—is inherent in any act of artistic creation, let alone that specific kind of writing that deals in imaginary situations and characters. And a part of that retreat must always be into a ‘wild’, or ordinarily repressed and socially hidden, self: into a place always a complexity beyond reality, never fully comprehensible or explicable, always more potential than realized; yet where no one will ever penetrate as far as we have” (from John Fowles, The Tree, pp. 75-6.)

  • Sapwood and Heartwood

    Michael Christie, Greenwood: ” Even when a tree is at its most vital, only ten percent of its tissue—the outermost rings, its sapwood—can be called alive. All the rings of inner heartwood are essentially dead, just lignin-reinforced cellulose built up year after year, stacked layer upon layer, through droughts and storms, diseases and stresses, everything that the tree has lived through preserved and recorded within its own body. Every tree is held up by it own history, the very bones of its ancestors.” (484)