Robin Wall Kimmerer, Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants

I started reading Robin Wall Kimmerer’s Braiding Sweetgrass a while back, but I didn’t take notes, and didn’t finish the book, and although I did enjoy what I read and found it useful, in the course I just finished, it was critiqued as being a romanticized view of Indigenous epistemologies. I was surprised by that, given its popularity—although maybe its popularity is a sign of its romanticism?—and thought that I might return to it to see for myself. After all, I’m interested in plants, particularly plants that are indigenous to Turtle Island (I’m not so interested in introduced weeds, which might be a failing on my part, or a sign that my environmentalism is a precious form of settler colonialism rather than a real engagement with the land as it is, assuming that such an engagement is even possible), so maybe I have something to learn from Kimmerer, who is both Potawatomi and a biologist (as well as a writer).

Braiding Sweetgrass is a long book—almost 400 pages—and it’s going to take me days to get through at the slow rate at which I read and take notes and summarize, but if I don’t do that work, I remember little of what I’ve read. Kimmerer begins, in the book’s preface, with “a sheaf of freshly picked sweetgrass, loose and flowing, like newly washed hair” and fragrant with “honeyed vanilla over the scent of river water and black earth” (ix). Both its scientific name, Hieerochloe odorata, and its Potawatomi name, wiingaashk, suggest that it’s a holy plant. “Breathe it in and you start to remember things you didn’t know you’d forgotten,” Kimmerer suggests (ix). That sheaf is ready for braiding, something that’s best done in collaboration with someone else, someone who can “hold the end so that you pull gently against each other, all the while leaning in, head to head, chatting and laughing, watching each other’s hands, one holding steady while the other shifts the slim bundles over one another, each in its turn” (ix). Perhaps it’s Kimmerer’s poetic prose that is part of the reason people see the book as romanticized: “Linked by sweetgrass, there is reciprocity between you, linked by sweetgrass, the holder as vital as the braider” (ix). Kimmerer invites her reader to hold the end of the bundle while she braids—and she promises to do the same for her reader as well (ix-x). 

The braid of sweetgrass becomes an image of the book I’m about to read. First of all, we need to understand that sweetgrass—wiingaashk—is not to be given or taken: she “belongs to herself” (x). So Kimmerer offers, in its place, “a braid of stories meant to heal our relationship with the world,” one woven from three strands: “indigenous ways of knowing, scientific knowledge, and the story of an Anishinabekwe scientist trying to bring them together in service to what matters most” (x). “It is an intertwining of science, spirit, and story—old stories and new ones that can be medicine for our broken relationship with earth, a pharmacopoeia of healing stories that allow us to imagine a different relationship, in which people and land are good medicine for each other,” Kimmerer writes (x).

The book’s first section, “Planting Sweetgrass,” begins with “Skywoman Falling,” an Anishinaabe creation story. She fell through a hole in Skyworld; her fall was broken by flying geese, and the turtle agreed to allow her to rest on his back (3-4). Animals and birds tried to dive to the bottom of the water to retrieve mud, but only the smallest and weakest, Muskrat, was successful, even though he died in the attempt (4). (A Cree narrative tells a similar story.) Skywoman danced on the earth, singing a song of thanksgiving, and the land grew until the whole earth was made (4). “Not by Skywoman alone, but from the alchemy of all the animals’ gifts coupled with her deep gratitude,” Kimmerer writes. “Together they formed what we know today as Turtle Island, our home” (4). “Like any good guest, Skywoman had not come empty-handed,” Kimmerer continues (4). When she fell, Skywoman had grasped at plants, which were still clutched in her hand, and she spread them on the earth until they began to grow: “Wild grasses, flowers, trees, and medicines spread everywhere. And now that the animals, too, had plenty to eat, many came to live with her on Turtle Island” (5).

In Potawatomi stories, sweetgrass was the first plant to grow on the earth, “its fragrance a sweet memory of Skywoman’s hand” (5). It is “a powerful ceremonial plant cherished by many indigenous nations,” and it is used to make beautiful baskets (5). “Both medicine and a relative, its value is both material and spiritual,” Kimmerer writes (5). That complexity is important, particularly for settlers, who might tend to think in binaries, keeping sacred separate from material, or rejecting the possible of kinship with non-human living things. 

Kimmerer returns to braiding the sweetgrass, suggesting that when people braid it, they are “braiding the hair of Mother Earth, showing her our loving attention, our care for her beauty and well-being, in gratitude for all she has given us. Children hearing the Skywoman story from birth know in their bones the responsibility that flows between humans and the earth” (5). And, I suppose, children who grow up hearing the story of Adam and Eve learn something very different: dominion and sin and expulsion and shame and punishment. For Kimmerer, the story of Skywoman holds Potawatomi beliefs, history, and relationships, and it speaks not only of origins, but “of how we can go forward” (5).

Kimmerer has a portrait of Skywoman hanging in her laboratory (5). “It might seem an odd juxtaposition, but to me she belongs there,” Kimmerer writes, because as she does her work, as a biologist and a writer, she is sitting “at the feet of my elder teachers listening for their songs” (6). She teaches a morning class on General Ecology, and she recalls giving her students a survey that asked them to rate their understandings of the negative interactions that take place between humans and their environment (6). “Nearly every one of the two hundred students said confidently that humans and nature are a bad mix,” Kimmerer recalls (6). They knew about climate change, habitat loss, and environmental toxins, and as a result they had decided that there were no positive interactions possible between humans and nature (6). “I was stunned,” Kimmerer writes. “How is it possible that in twenty years of education they cannot think of any beneficial relationships between people and the environment?” (6). Perhaps they only know the ways humans abuse their environment, and so “[a]s the land becomes impoverished, so too does the scope of their vision” (6). Perhaps the problem is that they are only looking at the behaviour of humans, rather than the behaviour of the environment: “I realized that they could not even imagine what beneficial relations between their species and others might look like. How can we begin to move toward ecological and cultural sustainability if we cannot even imagine what the path feels like? If we can’t imagine the generosity of geese? These students were not raised on the story of Skywoman” (6).

Instead, those students grew up with Adam and Eve and banishment from a garden, with a story in which the “mother of men” was “instructed to subdue the wilderness into which she was cast” (7). “Same species, same earth, different stories,” Kimmerer writes. “Like Creation stories everywhere, cosmologies are a source of identity and orientation in the world. They tell us who we are. We are inevitably shaped by them no matter how distant they may be from our consciousness” (7). One story is about “the generous embrace of the living world,” while the other is about banishment and exile, about “passing through an alien world on a rough road” to our “real home in heaven” (7). Then the offspring of Skywoman meet the children of Eve, “and the land around us bears the scars of that meeting, the echoes of our stories” (7).

“The Skywoman story, shared by the original peoples throughout the Great Lakes, is a constant star in the constellation of teachings we call the Original Instructions,” Kimmerer writes (7). Those instructions are not commandments; instead, “they are like a compass: they provide an orientation but not a map. The work of living is creating that map for yourself” (7). “How to follow the Original Instructions will be different for each of us and different for every era,” she continues (7). She wonders what meaning those instructions have today, when the world is no longer young and “some suspect that we have worn out our welcome by casting the Original Instructions aside” (8). “How can we translate from the stories at the world’s beginning to the hour so much closer to the end?” she asks. “The landscape has changed, but the story remains. And as I turn it over and over again, Skywoman seems to look me in the eye and ask, in return for this gift of a world on Turtle’s back, what will I give in return?” (8). Skywoman was an immigrant, Kimmerer suggests, like most of us living on Turtle Island (8). And like Skywoman, we are also always falling, finding ourselves somewhere new and unexpected (8-9). “Despite our fears of falling, the gifts of the world stand by to catch us,” Kimmerer states (9).

It’s also worth remembering that when she arrived here, Skywoman was pregnant, and she worked to provide a world for her grandchildren, not only for herself (9). “It was through her actions of reciprocity, the give and take with the land, that the original inhabitant became indigenous,” Kimmerer states. “For all of us, becoming indigenous to a place means living as if your future mattered, to take care of the place as if our lives, both material and spiritual, depended on it” (9). How different this is from Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang’s argument in “Decolonization Is Not a Metaphor,” where any attempt by settlers to change their ways of thinking is dismissed as “conscientization” or worse (19). She suggests that the differences between the stories of Skywoman and of Eve are important, that “we can’t meaningfully proceed with healing, with restoration, without ‘re-story-ation’” (9). “In other words, our relationship with land cannot heal until we hear its stories,” she writes. “But who will tell them?” (9).

In Indigenous ways of understanding the world, humans are not the pinnacle of evolution; rather than being at the top of the hierarchy, they are “the younger brothers of Creation,” they “have the least experience with how to live and thus the most to learn” (9). We must look to our teachers in other species for guidance (9). “Their wisdom is apparent in the way that they live,” she suggests. “They teach us by example. They’ve been on the earth for far longer than we have been, and have had time to figure things out” (9). Plants, in particular, live above ground and below ground, joining Skyworld to the earth (9-10). When Skywoman scattered her handful of seeds across Turtle Island, “she was sowing sustenance for the body and also for the mind, emotion, and spirit: she was leaving us teachers. The plants can tell us her story; we need to learn to listen” (10).

The next chapter, “The Council of Pecans,” takes us to Oklahoma, to skinny boys fishing for their supper in the waters of the Canadian River (11). They discover pecans under the trees, though, and carry them home for supper in sacks made out of their dungarees, the legs tied shut (12). One of those skinny little boys was Kimmerer’s grandfather, before the drought of the 1930s (12). The word “pecan” came to English from an Potawatomi word: pigan, meaning any kind of nut (12). She notes that her ancestors ended up in Oklahoma because their lands on Lake Michigan were taken by settlers, and so her ancestors ended up walking, surrounded by soldiers, on what’s known as the Trail of Death: first to Wisconsin, then Kansas, and finally Oklahoma (13). “So much was scattered and left along that trail,” Kimmerer writes. “Graves of half the people. Language. Knowledge, Names” (13). When the people arrived in Kansas, they found pecan trees, and without having a name for this new food, they just called it by their generic name for a nut, pigan, which entered English as pecan (13). Nuts are excellent food, high in protein and fat, calories and vitamins—“everything you need to sustain life,” which is their point: a nut is the embryo of a tree, and it contains everything that embryo will need to live (13). 

Pecans are related to butternuts, black walnuts, and hickories, and the Potawatomi people carried them whenever they migrated, so that today, pecans “trace the rivers through the prairies, populating forest bottomlands where people settled” (14). “My Haudenosaunee neighbors say that their ancestors were so fond of butternuts that they are a good marker of old village sites today,” Kimmerer writes. “Sure enough, there is a grove of butternuts, uncommon in ‘wild’ forests, on the hill above the spring at my house. I clear the weeds around the young ones every year and slosh a bucket of water on them when the rains are late. Remembering” (14). My grandmother’s yard in southwestern Ontario was lined with butternut trees; she didn’t gather the nuts in the fall, leaving them to the squirrels, who would bury the nuts in the garden and then forget them, leading to volunteer trees my grandmother considered to be weeds. 

A large pecan tree marks Kimmerer’s family home in Oklahoma. She thinks about the story of her grandfather again, and suggests that he was wise to bring home as many nuts as he could find, since pecans don’t make a crop every year (14). Nuts are food for winter, because they keep, and because the protein and calories are needed then, to keep people (and animals) warm (14). Trees make a lot of nuts to make sure that some germinate and produce new trees (15). But that takes a lot of energy, which explains why it takes years for nuts to make enough sugar to bank as starch in their roots—starch that is used to make nuts (or mast) (15). “Forest ecologists hypothesize that mast fruiting is the simple outcomes of this energetic equation: make fruit only when you can afford it,” Kimmerer writes (15). But since some trees grow in better habitats than others, some should make mast more often, but that’s not the case: when one tree fruits, they all fruit, regardless of whether they are growing in full sun or heavy shade (15). “The trees act not as individuals, but somehow as a collective,” she continues. “Exactly how they do this, we don’t yet know. But what we see is the power of unity. What happens to one happens to us all. We can starve together or feast together. All flourishing is mutual” (15).

This “communal generosity might seem incompatible with the process of evolution, which invokes the imperative of individual survival,” Kimmerer states, but separating “individual well-being from the health of the whole” is “a grave error,” since “[t]he gift of abundance from pecans is also a gift to themselves”: “By sating squirrels and people, the trees are ensuring their own survival. The genes that translate to mast fruiting flow on evolutionary currents into the next generations, while those that lack the ability to participate will be eaten and reach an evolutionary dead end” (16). “Forest scientists describe the generosity of mast fruiting with the predator-satiation hypothesis,” she continues: if the trees make more nuts than the squirrels can eat, then some nuts will survive to become new trees (16). The squirrels have lots of babies (16). The next year, without the nuts to feed on, the squirrels have to work harder to find food, which exposes them to predators like hawks, and their population drops (16). “You can imagine the trees whispering to each other at this point, ‘There are just a few squirrels left. Wouldn’t this be a good time to make some nuts?’ All across the landscape, out come the pecan flowers poised to become a bumper crop again,” Kimmerer writes. “Together, the trees survive, and thrive” (16).

The chapter is structured through a comparison between the pecans and the federal government’s Indian Removal policies, which “wrenched many Native peoples from our homelands,” “separated us from our traditional knowledge and lifeways, the bones of our ancestors, our sustaining plants—but even this did not extinguish identity” (16). So the federal government started to take children away from their families and cultures, sending them to boarding schools (16-17). Families were punished for not sending their children away (17). “Children, language, lands: almost everything was stripped away, stolen when you weren’t looking because you were trying to stay alive,” Kimmerer writes. “In the face of such loss, one thing our people could not surrender was the meaning of land” (17). Unlike settlers, who see land as real estate, capital, or natural resources, to Indigenous people, land was everything: “identity, the connection to our ancestors, the home of our nonhuman kinfolk, our pharmacy, our library, the source of all that sustained us. Our lands were where our responsibility to the world was enacted, sacred ground. It belonged to itself; it was a gift, not a commodity, so it could never be bought or sold” (17). Land held in common gave them strength, something to fight for—and so, to the federal government, that belief was a threat (17). And so the government demanded that Indigenous peoples stop holding their land in common, and instead accept the notion of private property (18). Kimmerer’s ancestors agreed; they became the Citizen Potawatomi and accepted allotments of land which the government couldn’t take from them (18-19). But if the federal government couldn’t take away that land, the county could, for unpaid taxes, or a bank could, or a rancher could offer money or whiskey for the property—and within a generation, most of that land was gone (19).

Trees, like people, communicate with each other—something Kimmerer’s Elders know, and something science has confirmed more recently (19-20). They emit hormones into the air, and send messages through mycorrhizae, “fungal strands that inhabit tree roots” (21). The trees are generous with their food, “literally giving themselves so that we can live. But in the giving their lives are also ensured. Our taking returns benefit to them in the circle of life making life, the chain of reciprocity” (20). “Living by the precepts of the Honorable Harvest—to take only what is given, to use it well, to be grateful for the gift, and to reciprocate the gift—is easy in a pecan grove,” Kimmerer writes. “We reciprocate the gift by taking care of the grove, protecting it from harm, planting seeds to that new groves will shade the prairie and feed the squirrels” (20-21).

The chapter concludes with a trip to Oklahoma, to see what’s left of her grandfather’s allotment (21). “From the hilltop you can still see pecan groves along the river,” she writes. “At night we dance on the old powwow grounds. The ancient ceremonies greet the sunrise” (21). It’s not just a family trip: other Potawatomi arrive: “The smell of corn soup and the sound of drums fill the air as the nine bands of Potawatomi, scattered across the country by this history of removal, come together again for a few days each year in a search for belonging” (21). I like the word “search”: the belonging isn’t assumed—it is a work in progress. She compares the occasional Gathering of Nations to the pecan trees and their occasional production of mast: “we are beginning to follow the guidance of our elders the pecans by standing together for the benefit of all. We are remembering what they said, that all flourishing is mutual” (21). The chapter concludes where it began, with memories of her grandfather gathering pecans: “He would be surprised to find us all here, dancing the circle, remembering pecans” (21).

The following chapter, “The Gift of Strawberries,” begins with a recollection of the way Evon Peter, a Gwich’in man, a Chief, and an environmental activist, once introduced himself, as “a boy raised by a river” (22). For Kimmerer, the word “raised” is complex here: it could suggest geographical location, or that the river was responsible for teaching him and feeding him, or both (22). “In a way, I was raised by strawberries, fields of them,” she writes:

Not to exclude the maples, hemlocks, white pines, goldenrod, asters, violets and mosses of upstate New York, but it was the wild strawberries, beneath dewy leaves on an almost-summer morning, who gave me my sense of the world, my place in it. Behind our house were miles of old hay fields divided by stone walls, long abandoned from farming but not yet grown up to forest. After the school bus chugged up our hill, I’d throw down my red plaid book bag, change my clothes before my mother could think of a chore, and jump across the crick to go wandering in the goldenrod. Our mental maps had all the landmarks we kids needed: the fort under the sumacs, the rock pile, the river, the big pine with branches so evenly spaced you could climb to the top as if it were a ladder—and the strawberry patches. (22)

She recalls the experience of picking the ripest berries, and says that even now, 50 years later, “finding a patch of wild strawberries still touches me with a sensation of surprise, a feeling of unworthiness and gratitude for the generosity and kindness that comes with an unexpected gift all wrapped up in red and green” (23). And she still wonders about how to respond to the strawberries’ generosity: “Sometimes it feels like a silly question with a very simple answer: eat them” (23).

But others have asked the same questions (23). Strawberries are part of Skywoman’s story. When her daughter died giving birth to her twins, Flint and Sapling, “Skywoman buried her beloved daughter in the earth. Her final gifts, our most revered plants, grew from her body. The strawberry arose from her heart” (23). For Kimmerer, “[s]trawberries first shaped my view of a world full of gifts simply scattered at your feet. A gift comes to you through no action of your own, free, having moved toward you without your beckoning. It is not a reward: you cannot earn it, or call it to you, or even deserve it. And yet it appears” (23-24). All the recipient of a gift has to do is accept it, “to be open-eyed and present” (24). Her family always made gifts, and her father’s favourite present was wild strawberry shortcake. “As children raised by strawberries, we were probably unaware that the gift of berries was from the fields themselves, not from us,” she writes. “Our gift was time and attention and care and red-stained fingers” (24-25).

“Gifts from the earth or from each other establish a particular relationship, an obligation of sorts to give, to receive, and to reciprocate,” she continues (25). To reciprocate the gift of strawberries, she would help the plants’ runners take root (25). She and her siblings would often be hired by neighbouring farmers looking for people to pick strawberries; one of the farmers would warn them not to eat any berries, because they belonged to her (25). “I knew the difference: in the fields behind my house, the berries belonged to themselves,” Kimmerer recalls. “At this lady’s roadside stand, she sold them for sixty cents a quart” (25). That was an early lesson in economics (25).

Kimmerer reflects on how the nature of an object changes if it comes as a gift or as a commodity (26). She feels no inherent obligation to something she has purchased, but if the same object were to come as a gift, that would create an “ongoing relationship” between giver and receiver (26). “Wild strawberries fit the definition of gift, but grocery store berries do not,” she suggests. “It’s the relationship between producer and consumer that changes everything” (26). She would not want to see wild strawberries for sale: “They were not meant to be sold, only to be given” (26). That’s why sweetgrass isn’t supposed to be sold—it’s supposed to be a gift: that’s the essence of its sacredness (26-27). “Sweetgrass belongs to Mother Earth,” she writes. “Sweetgrass pickers collect properly and respectfully, for their own use and the needs of their community,” and they leave a gift in return, as well as tend to the plants’ well-being (27). “The braids are given as gifts, to honor, to say thank you, to heal and to strengthen,” she tells us (27). “Gifts move, and their value increases with their passage,” and the more the gifts are shared, the greater their value becomes (27). 

She thinks about Lewis Hyde’s discussion of the phrase “Indian giver,” suggesting that it comes from a “cross-cultural misinterpretation between an indigenous culture operating in a gift economy and a colonial culture predicated on the concept of private property” (27). Indigenous people gave gifts to settlers, expecting their generosity to be reciprocated, but they often were not (27-28). Gifts aren’t free, because they create sets of relationships; they generate reciprocity (or at least expectations of reciprocity). In contrast, according to “Western thinking, private land is understood to be a ‘bundle of rights,’ whereas in a gift economy property has a ‘bundle of responsibilities’ attached” (28).

Kimmerer recalls a research trip to the Andes—particularly a visit to a local market where the owner of her favourite stall, Edita, was generous to her (28). “I dreamed not long ago of that market with all its vivid textures. I walked through the stalls with a basket over my arm as always and went right to Edita for a bunch of fresh cilantro,” she recalls (28). In the dream, the cilantro was a gift, as was the bread at another stall (28-29). “I floated through the market with a sense of euphoria,” she writes. “Gratitude was the only currency accepted here. It was all a gift. It was like picking strawberries in my field: the merchants were just intermediaries passing on gifts from the earth” (29). This account is lovely, but it might be one point where Kimmerer romanticizes gift giving: after all, Indigenous peoples were traders as well as givers, and that mode of exchange—trading—is left out of this discussion. Nonetheless, she thinks about that dream, about how she was “witness there to the conversion of a market economy to a gift economy, from private goods to common wealth. And in that transformation the relationships became as nourishing as the food I was getting. Across the market stalls and blankets, warmth and compassion were changing hands. There was a shared celebration of abundance for all we’d been given. And since every market basket contained a meal, there was justice” (29). 

But Kimmerer admits that when she speaks of the strawberries giving her a gift, she is speaking in metaphor (29-30). But at the same time, she isn’t: the sweetest, tastiest strawberries will be eaten and their seeds dispersed, so being sweet and tasty can be an evolutionary advantage (30). “What I mean of course is that our human relationship with strawberries is transformed by our choice of perspective,” she continues. “It is human perception that makes the world a gift. When we view the world this way, gratitude and reciprocity thus developed can increase the evolutionary fitness of both plant and animal” (30). That means, according to Kimmerer, that a culture that sees the world as a gift and therefore treats it “with respect and reciprocity” will be more likely to survive longer “than the people who destroy it” (30). In other words, “[t]he stories we choose to shape our behaviors have adaptive consequences” (30).

Kimmerer quotes Lewis Hyde’s contention that thinking of things as gifts guarantees they will be plentiful (30). She notes that in the past, when food came directly from the land, it was easier to see it as a gift, but that it’s harder when food comes from the supermarket (30-31). “How, in our modern world, can we find our way to understand the earth as a gift again, to make our relations with the world sacred again?” she asks. One way is to refuse to buy things that should be gifts, available to all: sweetgrass, water, industrialized food (31) (although it’s so difficult to avoid industrialized food in our world). The market economy is one story we tell ourselves, but it’s not the only possible story, “and we are free to tell another, to reclaim the old one,” one which “sustains the living systems on which we depend” (31). “We can choose,” she reiterates (31). Perhaps, but it’s very hard to make such a choice in the face of a monolithic market economy, which makes the entire world a commodity.

In the chapter’s conclusion, Kimmerer returns to the fields of wild strawberries of her childhood, and recalls how sometimes she would eat unripe fruit out of impatience. “Fortunately, our capacity for self-restraint grows and develops like the berries beneath the leaves, so I learned to wait a little,” she writes (32). She knows that transformation is slow: “The commodity economy has been here on Turtle Island for four hundred years, eating up the white strawberries and everything else. But people have grown weary of the sour taste in their mouths. A great longing is upon us, to live again in a world made of gifts” (32). I hope she is right, but I fear she isn’t, and that even if she is, we are running out of time for such a transformation to occur.

The next chapter, “An Offering,” begins with a recollection that the Potawatomi were once canoe people until they were removed to Oklahoma, but states that they didn’t forget the water (33). She recalls childhood summers camping in the Adirondacks and the way her father would offer some coffee “to the gods of Tahawus” (33-34). That ceremony “drew a circle around our family” (34). She notes that Tahawus is the Algonquin name for Mount Marcy, the highest peak in the Adirondacks; the word means “the Cloud Splitter” (34). “My father had been on Tahawus’s summit many times and knew it well enough to call it by name, speaking with intimate knowledge of the place and the people who came before,” she writes (34). He often invoked the gods of the places where they camped, and by doing that, Kimmerer “came to know that each place was inspirited, was home to others before we arrived and long after we left” (34). This taught her family “the respect we owed these other beings and how to show our thanks for summer mornings” (35). In other times, the Potawatomi “raised their thanks in morning songs, in prayer, and the offering of sacred tobacco,” but the songs had been taken away by boarding schools and they had no sacred tobacco (35). However, they had returned to water (35).

Her mother’s “more pragmatic ritual of respect” was to make sure that each campsite was spotless before the family left (35). But these rituals only happened on vacation, not when they were at home in town (35). However, on Sundays her parents would take the family on walks along the river, looking for herons and muskrats, or to look for spring flowers in the woods, or on picnics (35). There, the same ceremonies of respect were performed (35). “And yet, as I grew to adolescence, the offering began to leave me angry or sad,” she writes. “The circle that had brought me a sense of belonging turned inside out. I heard in the words a message that we did not belong because we spoke in the language of exiles” (35-36). But the land didn’t care about that: “The land knows you, even when you are lost” (36). As she grew older her family reconnected to her nation and to their ceremonies, and the circle of respect and gratitude grew larger, and she realized that her family’s ceremonies weren’t second-hand after all (36). “What else can you offer the earth, which has everything?” she asks at the chapter’s conclusion. “What else can you give but something of yourself? A homemade ceremony, a ceremony that makes a home” (38).

In the next chapter, “Asters and Goldenrod,” Kimmerer recalls arriving at college to study botany. She told her faculty adviser that she wanted “to learn about why asters and goldenrod looked so good together” (39). He was not impressed; he told her that’s not what botany is about (40). She remembers the autumn display of Canada goldenrod growing alongside New England asters, and her adviser’s words about botany (40-41). “I wanted to know why certain stems bent easily for baskets and some would break, why the biggest berries grew in the shade and why they made us medicines, which plants are edible, why those little pink orchids only grow under pines,” but none of that was botany, according to her adviser (41). Science wasn’t about beauty (41). It was an echo of what her grandfather experienced at boarding school, when he had to leave his family, culture, and language behind: “The professor made me doubt where I came from, what I knew, and claimed that his was the right way to think. Only he didn’t cut my hair off” (41).

“In moving from a childhood in the woods to the university I had unknowingly shifted between worldviews, from a natural history of experience, in which I knew plants as teachers and companions to whom I was linked with mutual responsibility, into the realm of science,” she writes (41-42). Science only wants to know how plants work, not what they can tell us or who they are (42). Plants were thought of as objects, not subjects, and botany didn’t leave much room for someone who thought the way Kimmerer did: “The only way I could make sense of it was to conclude that the things I had always believed about plants must not be true after all” (42).

She wanted to quit studying botany, but she carried on, becoming “mesmerized by plant ecology, evolution, taxonomy, physiology, soils, and fungus” (42). The plants were her teachers, as well as her professors, but “there was always something tapping at my shoulder, willing me to turn around. When I did, I did not know how to recognize what stood behind me” (42). Kimmerer’s natural inclination was to see relationships, but science separates the observer from the observed, and the questions that interest her would violate that objectivity (42). She accepted the scientific method and went on to graduate school and a faculty position (42-43). But while she knew the names of the plants, she was ignoring their songs (43). But a chance encounter with a news clipping about the Louis Vieux Elm began to change her approach: “He was our Potawatomi grandfather, one who had walked all the way from the Wisconsin forests to the Kansas prairie with my grandma Sha-note. He was a leader, one who took care of the people in their hardship” (44). She began “a long, slow journey back to my people, called out to me by the tree that stood above their bones” (44). 

“To walk the science path I had stepped off the path of indigenous knowledge,” Kimmerer continues. “But the world has a way of guiding your steps” (44). She was invited to a gathering of Elders to discuss the traditional knowledge of plants (44). She learned about the depth of that knowledge and realized how shallow her own understandings were (44). “I circled right back to where I had begun, to the question of beauty,” she writes (44). The questions science asks are too narrow and the questions she wanted to ask were bigger than they were (45).

Next Kimmerer explains how we see yellow and purple, the colours of goldenrod and New England aster (plants that grow in our yard here in Regina). Purple and yellow are complementary colours, as different as they could be, on opposite sides of the colour wheel (45). And, while bees see flowers differently than humans do, they tend to see purple and yellow in a similar way (46). That colour combination, the contrast it creates, makes the flowers “the most attractive target in the whole meadow, a beacon for bees,” and so the flowers receive more visits from pollinators than if they were alone (46). “The question of goldenrod and asters was of course just emblematic of what I really wanted to know,” Kimmerer continues. “It was an architecture of relationships, of connections that I yearned to understand. I wanted to see the shimmering threads that hold it all together” (46).

We need science and poetry, she concludes. She refers to Indigenous scholar Gregory Cajete, who says “that in indigenous ways of knowing, we understand a thing only when we understand it with all four aspects of our being: mind, body, emotion, and spirit” (47). Science privileges only one or two of those: mind and body (47). Now Kimmerer has learned to fly between Indigenous and scientific knowledges, or at least to try to, following the example of the bees, the way they cross-pollinate flowers (47). “That September pairing of purple and gold is lived reciprocity; its wisdom is that the beauty of one is illuminated by the radiance of the other,” she writes. “Science and art, matter and spirit, indigenous knowledge and Western science—can they be goldenrod and asters for each other? When I am in their presence, their beauty asks me for reciprocity, to be the complementary color, to make something beautiful in response” (47).

The next chapter, “Learning the Grammar of Animacy,” is about language and listening to the sounds of the forest (48). The language is Potawatomi, and Kimmerer’s first encounter with it was in a book by the Anishinaabe ethnobotanist Keewaydinoquay, which includes a discussion of the traditional uses of fungi by her people (49). “Puhpowee” is a Potawatomi word that means “the force which causes mushrooms to push up from the earth overnight” (49). “As a biologist, I was stunned that such a word existed,” Kimmerer writes. “In all its technical vocabulary, Western science has no such term, no words to hold this mystery” (49). She could see “an entire process of close observation” in that word, and she realized that she wanted to speak the language that holds the word Puhpowee

“Had history been different, I would likely speak Bodewadmimwin, or Potawatomi, an Anishinaabe language,” Kimmerer tells us. “But, like many of the three hundred and fifty indigenous languages of the Americas, Potawatomi is threatened, and I speak the language you read. The powers of assimilation did their work as my chance of hearing that language, and yours too, was washed from the mouths of Indian children in government boarding schools where speaking your native tongue was forbidden” (49). That’s how her grandfather lost his language (50). Besides, she lives far from the Citizen Potawatomi reservation and would have no one to talk to in the language (50). However, she did once slip into a language class at a gathering of her nation, one where every fluent speaker of the language was present (50). There were only nine fluent speakers, all in their seventies and older (50). Now Kimmerer is learning the language herself (51). Every Tuesday and Thursday she joins an online language class (52). At night she runs through language drills (52). It’s hard work, and discouraging, but she keeps at it (53). 

Kimmerer notes the differences between Potawatomi and English: the way the former sounds, the way it’s based in verbs rather than nouns, the way it divides the world into animate and inanimate nouns (53). The language’s reliance on verbs is important, because it’s another way that it sees the world as alive (55). “This is the grammar of animacy,” Kimmerer writes (55). The same words are used in Potawatomi to refer to family and to the living world, because the living world is also considered family (55). “English doesn’t give us many tools for incorporating respect for animacy,” she notes. “In English, you are either a human or a thing” (56). English needs different pronouns, other than “it,” to suggest respect and relationality (57-58). This idea is expanded on in Kimmerer’s essay “Speaking of Nature,” available online.

Now comes the book’s second section, “Tending Sweetgrass,” which begins with a brief epigraph about the need to take care of wild meadows of sweetgrass by weeding them—something I’d never considered, although it’s what stewards of native grassland do. The first chapter, “Maple Sugar Moon,” begins with a story about Nanabozho diluting maple sap so that people would learn about responsibility and possibility (63). There is a sugar bush at Kimmerer’s country place, and her children convinced her to take up tapping trees and making syrup (64). The trees have sophisticated sensors in every bud, which tell the tree when to begin sending the sap the tree needs to grow up from its roots (65). Her people made syrup from the sap in different ways—by boiling it in copper pots, but before that, by allowing it to freeze, which separates the water from the sugar, and by putting it in shallow wooden pans beside fires, where it would evaporate (67). She refers to a story not unlike the one Leanne Betasamosake Simpson tells about Kwezens learning about the sweetness of maple sap from squirrels in her essay “Land as Pedagogy: Nishnaabeg Intelligence and Rebellious Transformation.”   But, more importantly, I think, she notes that “[t]he Maples each year carry out their part of the Original Instructions, to care for the people. But they care for their own survival at the same time” (68). She explains the process she alluded to earlier in more detail, explaining how sugars rise up the tree to feed both budding leaves and people (68). When the buds open and leaves emerge, “they start making sugar on their own and the sapwood returns to its work as the water conduit,” and the sugar begins to move from the leaves back to the roots, where it is stored as starch (69). “They syrup we pour over pancakes on a winter morning is summer sunshine flowing in golden streams to pool on our plates,” Kimmerer writes (69).

But the point of the Nanabozho story Kimmerer begins the chapter with is twofold: “one half of the truth is that the earth endows us with great gifts, the other half is that the gift is not enough. The responsibility does not lie with the maples alone. The other half belongs to us: we participate in its transformation. It is our work, and our gratitude, that distills the sweetness” (69). She thinks about the people who planted those maple trees—homesteaders, settlers—and the responsibility she has to them, as well as to the trees themselves (70). “I have no way to pay them back. Their gift to me is far greater than I have the ability to reciprocate,” she writes, suggesting that perhaps all she can do is love them (70). “All I know to do is to leave another gift, for them and for the future, those next unknowns who will live here,” she states. So she plants daffodils under the maples, “in homage to their beauty and in reciprocity for their gift” (71).

The following chapter, “Witch Hazel,” recounts a relationship—a friendship—with an elderly neighbour named Hazel, who had a witch hazel tree growing that flowers in November (78). That story takes place in Kentucky, where Novembers are dreary but not frozen. After that comes “A Mother’s Work,” which begins with the process of moving from Kentucky to New York (82). The house she bought had what had once been a spring-fed pond, although it had become choked with weeds (83). There were ducks (83-85) and geese, which were able to walk on the mat of algae on the water’s surface (85). Kimmerer decided to do something to clean up the pond, to reverse the process of eutrophication that had taken place: “Generations of algae and lily pads and fallen leaves and autumn’s apples falling into the pond built up the sediments, layering the once clean gravel at the bottom in a sheet of muck. All those nutrients fueled the growth of new plants, which fueled the growth of more new plants, in an accelerating cycle” (85). Eventually the pond will become a marsh and then a meadow and a forest (86). It’s part of the aging process: “Making my pond swimmable would be an exercise in turning back time” (86). She tried removing the algae and sediments, but it was impossible (86-87). She learned what kind of algae were floating on the water’s surface: several different kinds, living together, her “partners in restoration” (88)—an odd phrase for something she’s trying to eliminate. 

Kimmerer rakes algae off of the pond and carried it away from the water, since as it decayed it would return nutrients to the water and continue the eutrophication (88). She keeps digging at the mud on the bottom (88). “I simply gave myself up to the task,” she writes, wading into the water without boots or hip waders (89). “I developed a new relationship with mud,” she writes. “Instead of trying to protect myself from it, I became oblivious to it, noticing its presence only when I would go back to the house and see strands of algae caught in my hair or the water in the shower turning brown” (89). One morning she discovered a bullfrog tadpole in a large clump of algae dragged out of the pond. One tadpole, and then more, which slowed her down: “I could work so much faster if I didn’t have to stop and pick tadpoles from the tangle of every moral dilemma” (89-90). But she wasn’t there to kill tadpoles, to make the pond swimmable for her children by killing another mother’s offspring (90). She began finding other creatures in the algae: small fish, diving beetles, dragonfly larvae (90). She was bitten by a crayfish (90). “A whole food web was dangling from my rake,” she tells us (90). She bargained with herself “over the chain of responsibility” and tried to convince herself that the deaths of those creatures “served a greater good” (90).

The algae ended up in her compost pile: “The pond was literally feeding the garden” (91). The pond’s surface began to clear—for a few days, anyway, before the algae returned (91). She cut back the willows on the edge of the pond and used the stems to make baskets, but they grew back, as did other plants she gathered on the edge of the water (91). The pond grew clearer, but she discovered that by cutting the willows, she was also in danger of removing a yellow warbler’s nest without thinking (91-92). “I was so quick and single-minded about what I was doing that I forgot to look,” she admits. “I forgot to acknowledge that creating the home that I wanted for my children jeopardized the homemaking of other mothers whose intents were no different than mine” (92). Kimmerer realizes that “restoring a habitat, no matter how well intentioned, produces casualties. We set ourselves up as arbiters of what is good when often our standards of goodness are driven by narrow interests, but what we want” (92). “There are powerful forces of destruction loose in the world, advancing inexorably toward her children and mind,” she writes. “The onslaught of progress, well-intentioned to improve human habitat, threatens the nest I’ve chosen for my children” as surely as it threatened the nest of the yellow warbler she discovered (92). “What’s a good mother to do?” she asks (92).

She waits for a week, but the algae grows back. She returns to her work and discovers a new form of algae in the pond, Hydrodictyon, which provides fish and insects with a nursery, a safety net (93). She thinks about that algae as a lesson in motherhood (94). She thinks about the fact that among the Potawatomi, women are the Keepers of Water: “We carry the sacred water to ceremonies and act on its behalf” (94). Year after year she works to restore the pond, to arrive at a balance (94). The pond becomes part of her family’s lives, swimmable or not (94). She plants sweetgrass around the edge, spends countless hours there, years (94-95). “Our lives became entwined in ways both material and spiritual,” she writes. “It’s been a balanced exchange: I worked on the pond and the pond worked on me, and together we made a good home” (95).

Kimmerer learns about a rally in support of the cleanup of Onondaga Lake, which has become heavily polluted, and thinks about her obligations to that body of water (95). Meanwhile, after 12 years, “the pond is nearly swimmable, if you don’t mind the weeds that tickle your legs” (96). But, she admits, “in truth, I’ve not succeeded in turning back time,” and her daughters really don’t enjoy swimming in it (96). “So it is my grandchildren who will swim in this pond, and others whom the years will bring,” she concludes. “The circle of care grows larger and caregiving for my little pond spills over to caregiving for other waters. The outlet from my pond runs downhill to my good neighbor’s pond. What I do here matters. Everybody lives downstream. My pond drains to the brook, to the creek, to a great and needful lake. The water net connects us all” (97). In addition, the pond has shown her that motherhood doesn’t end “with creating a home where just my children can flourish”—it is about creating a home “where all of life’s beings can flourish. There are grandchildren to nurture, and frog children, nestlings, goslings, seedlings, and spores, and I still want to be a good mother” (97). I like the admissions of error and growth in this essay, and the conflicts Kimmerer explores, but I’m left wondering how nurturing all of those children fits in with the destruction involved in keeping the pond relatively clean. The conclusion might be a little too easy, but then again, the temptation to try to resolve those perhaps unresolvable conflicts is part of this kind of writing.

The following chapter, “The Consolation of Water Lilies,” carries on with the pond’s story (98). Her daughters grow up and move away. She visits one at college in California. She’s sad because she misses her daughter (98-99). She realizes that much of her work is feeding others (99). A kayak becomes her way of celebrating her freedom, of dealing with her midlife grief (100). At the pond where she paddles, she sees water lilies, and she tells us about their biology (101-03). “The earth, that first among good mothers, gives us the gift that we cannot provide ourselves,” she writes. “I hadn’t realized that I had come to the lake and said feed me, but my empty heart was fed. I had a good mother. She gives what we need without being asked” (103). And she thanks the earth for its gifts (103). But her human relations left gifts for her as well (103-04). “We are showered every day with gifts, but they are not meant for us to keep,” Kimmerer concludes. “Their life is in their movement, the inhale and exhale of our shared breath. Our work and our joy is to pass along the gift and to trust that what we put out into the universe will always come back” (104). That conclusion might be too romantic for some, but it picks up on Kimmerer’s earlier discussions of the gift economy.

That conclusion also leads to the considerations of gratitude in the following chapter, “Allegiance to Gratitude.” The “allegiance” of the title refers to the Pledge of Allegiance. When that was read to the class, Kimmerer’s daughter—then in the sixth grade—was refusing to stand (105) She remembers her experience with the Pledge of Allegiance when she was a child (106). For her daughter, it is a meaningless ritual, and Kimmerer refused to interfere in her child’s decision (106). But she begins to think about gratitude—about Indigenous cultures as “cultures of gratitude” (106). She thinks about the Onondaga Nation’s reserve, just a few miles west of her home, and the way the school day in that community begins and ends with the Thanksgiving Address, “a river of words as old as the people themselves, known more accurately in the Onondaga language as the Words That Come Before All Else” (107). “This ancient order of protocol sets gratitude as the highest priority,” Kimmerer writes. “The gratitude is directed straight to the ones who share their gifts with the world” (107). At that school, the children lead the oratory, and it is conducted in Onondaga (107). According to the Elders at Onondaga, “the Address is far more than a pledge, a prayer, or a poem alone” (108). Rather, it is “at heart an invocation of gratitude, but it is also a material, scientific inventory of the natural world. Another name for the oration is Greetings and Thanks to the Natural World. As it goes forward, each element of the ecosystem is named in its turn, along with its function. It is a lesson in Native science” (108).

Part of the power of the Address “surely rests in the length of time it takes to send greetings and thanks to so many,” Kimmerer suggests. “The listeners reciprocate the gift of the speaker’s words with their attention, and by putting their minds into the place where gathered minds meet” (110). Each call asks for the response “Now our minds are one,” which means listeners have to concentrate (110). Non-Indigenous people often fidget and think the Address goes on too long (110). Kimmerer’s response to those complaints: “‘Poor you,’ I sympathize. ‘What a pity that we have so much to be thankful for’” (110). 

“Imagine raising children in a culture in which gratitude is the first priority,” Kimmerer continues (111). The Thanksgiving Address “embodies the Onondaga relationship with the world. Each part of Creation is thanked in turn for fulfilling its Creator-given duty to the others” (111). It’s impossible to listen to the Address without feeling wealthy, and the gratitude it espouses is “a revolutionary idea”: “In a consumer society, contentment is a radical proposition. Recognizing abundance rather than scarcity undermines an economy that thrives by creating unmet desires. Gratitude cultivates an ethic of fullness, but the economy needs emptiness. The Thanksgiving Address reminds you that you already have everything you need” (111). “That’s good medicine for land and people alike,” Kimmerer states (111).

In addition, the oratory is a civics lesson, showing models of leadership: “the strawberry as leader of the berries, the eagle as leader of the birds” (111-12). That leadership is based on vision, generosity, and sacrifice; leaders are the first to offer their gifts (112). “It reminds the whole community that leadership is rooted not in power and authority, but in service and wisdom,” Kimmerer writes (112). Again, she asks, “What would it be like to be raised on gratitude, to speak to the natural world as a member of the democracy of species, to raise a pledge of interdependence?” (112). “In the Thanksgiving Address, I hear respect toward all our nonhuman relatives, not one political entity, but to all of life. What happens to nationalism, to political boundaries, when allegiance lies with the winds and waters that know no boundaries, that cannot be bought or sold?” she asks (112). 

The Thanksgiving Address is also a diplomatic tool, forging agreement in advance of difficult conversations (113). “Not surprisingly, Haudenosaunee decision-making proceeds from consensus, not by a vote of the majority,” Kimmerer reminds us. “A decision is made only ‘when our minds are one.’ Those words are a brilliant political preamble to negotiation, strong medicine for soothing partisan fervor” (113). And it “reminds us of how the world was meant to be in its original condition. We can compare the roll call of gifts bestowed on us with their current status. Are all the pieces of the ecosystem here and doing their duty? Is the water still supporting life? Are all the birds still healthy?” (114). The words of the Address “should awaken us to our loss and spur us to restorative action” (114). 

The words of the Address are simple, “but in the art of their joining, they become a statement of sovereignty, a political structure, a Bill of Responsibilities, an educational model, a family tree, and a scientific inventory of ecosystem services,” Kimmerer continues. “It is a powerful political document, a social contract, a way of being—all in one piece. But first and foremost, it is the credo for a culture of gratitude” (115). A culture of gratitude is also a culture of reciprocity: “Each person, human or no, is bound to every other in a reciprocal relationship. Just as all beings have a duty to me, I have a duty to them” (115). The address “reminds us that duties and gifts are two sides of the same coin” (115). And the Address is intended to be shared; as Onondaga Faithkeeper Oren Lyons told Kimmerer, “We’ve been waiting five hundred years for people to listen. If they’d understood the Thanksgiving then, we wouldn’t be in this mess” (116). And, for one last time, Kimmerer wonders why the Thanksgiving Address couldn’t replace the Pledge of Allegiance: “If we want to grow good citizens, then let us teach reciprocity. If what we aspire to is justice for all, then let it be justice for all of Creation” (116). She longs for “the day when we can hear the land give thanks in return” (117).

I had the privilege to hear the Thanksgiving Address once, and I agree that it’s a powerful expression of an important set of ideas. I should look for a version in English, like the one Kimmerer includes within this chapter, since the one I heard was in Mohawk. Despite my lack of comprehension, its length taught me about how much we have to be grateful for.

The book’s third section, “Picking Sweetgrass,” begins with “Epiphany in the Beans,” an essay about gardening—and the origin of (some) garden plants. “When Skywoman buried her beloved daughter in the earth, the plants that are special to the people sprang from her body,” Kimmerer writes. “Tobacco grew from her head. From her hair, sweetgrass. Her heart gave us the strawberry. From her breasts grew corn, from her belly the squash, and we see in her hands the long-fingered clusters of beans” (122). On this particular afternoon, Kimmerer realizes that “[t]he land loves us back. She loves us with beans and tomatoes, with roasting ears and blackberries and birdsongs. By a shower of gifts and a heavy rain of lessons. She provides for us and teaches us to provide for ourselves. That’s what good mothers do” (122). She calls this “[t]he epiphany in the beans” (122). “I spend a lot of time thinking about our relationships with land, how we are given so much and what we might give back,” she tells us. “I try to work through the equations of reciprocity and responsibility, the whys and wherefores of building sustainable relationships with ecosystems. All in my head. But suddenly there was no intellectualizing, no rationalizing, just the pure sensation of baskets full of mother love. The ultimate reciprocity, loving and being loved in return” (122-23).

She knows that her scientist self doesn’t accept this idea of love, but she maintains that “[g]ardens are simultaneously a material and a spiritual undertaking,” which is hard for scientists to accept, given the way they are “so fully brainwashed by Cartesian dualism” (123). But she maintains that her garden loves her back (124). “The exchange between plants and people has shaped the evolutionary history of both,” she writes. “Farms, orchards, and vineyards are stocked with species we have domesticated. Our appetite for their fruits leads us to till, prune, irrigate, fertilize, and weed on their behalf. Perhaps they domesticated us” (124). Perhaps the process was “a kind of mutual taming” (124). “We are linked in a co-evolutionary circle,” she notes: the sweetest fruits are the ones we plant, nurture, and protect from harm (124). “Food plants and people act as selective forces on each other’s evolution—the thriving of one in the best interest of the other,” she states. “This, to me, sounds a bit like love” (124). And “when you feel that the earth loves you back, that feeling transforms the relationship from a one-way street into a sacred bond” (124-25).

“I wonder if much that ails our society stems from the fact that we have allowed ourselves to be cut off from that love of, and from, the land,” Kimmerer writes. “It is medicine for a broken land and empty hearts” (126). But conventional forms of agriculture are about extraction, not love, unlike gardens where “food arises from partnership” (126). That’s true, but it might also be an exaggeration—some farmers might love their land, and some gardeners might behave in an extractive manner, and besides, few of us have gardens large enough to feed us throughout the year. Nevertheless, Kimmerer believes that gardening is the best way “to restore relationship between land and people” (126). “A garden is a nursery for nurturing connection, the soil for cultivation of practical reverence. And its power goes far beyond the garden gate—once you develop a relationship with a little patch of earth, and it becomes a seed itself,” she concludes (126-27). Gardeners say “I love you” in seeds, and the land reciprocates in beans (127).

The following chapter, “The Three Sisters,” is also about gardening. She suggests that the plants should tell their own story, since they make sounds as they grow: the squeaking and popping of corn growing rapidly, the “caressing sound” of beans, the creaking of ripening pumpkins (128). But those sounds are not the story: “Plants tell their stories not by what they say, but by what they do” (128). They “speak in a tongue that every breathing thing can understand. Plants teach in a universal language: food” (129). 

Next, Kimmerer describes the Three Sisters, “the genius of indigenous agriculture,” and how it works, in lovely, poetic prose that unpacks the science of the seeds’ germination and growth (129-31). Then she tells a version of the origin story of the Tree Sisters as a guarantee against hunger (131) and shows how the interaction between the plants show “lessons of reciprocity” and cooperation—again, in a mixture of poetry and science (131-34). She writes, “the beauty of the partnership is that each plant does what it does in order to increase its own growth. But as it happens, when the individuals flourish, so does the whole” (134). This relationship reminds Kimmerer “of one of the basic teachings of our people. The most important thing each of us can know is our unique gift and how to use it in the world. Individuality is cherished and nurtured, because, in order for the whole to flourish, each of us has to be strong in who we are and carry our gifts with conviction, so they can be shared with others” (134). 

After learning that her students had never grown anything, Kimmerer begins her botany course in a garden, with the Three Sisters (134-37) and the “earthy sexuality” of the garden (136). Every August, she has a Three Sisters potluck for her friends. “The genius of the Three Sisters is not only in the process by which they grow, but also in the complementarity of the three species on the kitchen table,” she writes (137). It’s not just a question of taste, but also one of nutrition (138). She compares the Three Sisters to modern agriculture, the way corn grows in rows, without relationships (138). Polycultures, like the Three Sisters, “are less susceptible to pest outbreaks than monocultures,” and predatory beetles and parasitic wasps that feed on pests coexist with the garden (139). That is very different from conventional agriculture, which kills everything with insecticides (138-39). 

Perhaps the garden should be known as a Four Sisters gardener, because the gardener is also a partner, picking bugs, scaring away crows, weeding and seeding (139-40). Gardeners are midwives to the gifts of the plants (140). They are part of the reciprocity (140). “Of all the wise teachers who have come into my life, none are more eloquent than these, who wordlessly in leaf and vine embody the knowledge of relationship,” Kimmerer concludes. “Alone, a bean is just a vine, squash an oversize leaf. Only when standing together with corn does a whole emerge which transcends the individual. The gifts of each are more fully expressed when they are nurtured together than alone. In ripe ears and swelling fruit, they counsel us that all gifts are multiplied in relationship” (140). 

When I started reading this book before, I got as far as the next chapter before I put it down, pressed to write yet another course paper, and forgot about it. “Wisgaak Gokpenagen: A Black Ash Basket” is about a dying art, dying because the trees used as its raw material are dying because of the emerald ash borer, an insect pest introduced from China: the making of black ash baskets. Kimmerer explains how the wood is split into thick ribbons (141), how the Potawatomi tradition of basket making has been carried, how it is taught (142). She describes the tree that provides the wood, the black ash, and finding the specific tree that will make a good basket (143). “Traditional harvesters recognize the individuality of each tree as a person, a nonhuman forest person,” she writes:

Trees are not taken, but requested. Respectfully, the cutter explains his purpose and the tree is asked permission for harvest. Sometimes the answer is no. It might be a cue in the surroundings—a vireo nest in the branches, or the bark’s adamant resistance to the questioning knife—that suggests a tree is not willing, or it might be the ineffable knowing that turns him away. if consent is granted, a prayer is made and tobacco is left as a reciprocating gift. The tree is felled with great care so as not to damage it or others in the fall. Sometimes a cutter will make a bed of spruce boughs to cushion the landing of the tree. When they finish, John and his son hoist the log to their shoulders and begin the long walk home. (144)

The best times to harvest trees is in the spring, when the sap is rising, and the fall (145).

The process of splitting the wood to produce the splints that are woven into baskets involves peeling off the wood between the annual rings (145). “Depending on the individual history of the tree and its pattern of rings, a strip might come off carrying the wood of five years or sometimes just one,” Kimmerer explains. “Every tree is different, but as the basket makers pound and peel, he is always moving back through time. The tree’s life is coming off in his hands, layer by layer” (145). Because the long strips of wood are of different thicknesses, the annual rings need to be further separated, and different kinds of baskets require different thicknesses of wood (145). Most of the work of weaving a basket is finding the tree and splitting it into splints (147). The most important thing, according to John Pigeon, her teacher, is that the tree honoured the basket maker with its life (147-48). So splints should never be wasted: short pieces are kept for small baskets and decoration, while scraps and shavings become tinder (148). This is the credo of the Honourable Harvest: “take only what you need and use everything you take” (148). Kimmerer thinks about paper, the way it comes from the lives of trees but is used and discarded as if it were nothing (148).

In her research, Kimmerer has found that harvesting the black ash trees causes gaps in the forest that allows light to reach the saplings: “Black ash and basket makers are partners in a symbiosis between harvesters and harvested: ash relies on people as the people rely on ash. Their fates are linked” (149). The traditional craft of basketmaking is reviving after being almost extinguished by colonization (149). However, the emerald ash borer is killing ash trees, creating “a rupture in the chain of relationship that stretches back through time immemorial” (150). Basketmakers are working with forest scientists “to resist the insect and to adapt to its aftermath” (150). Ash trees are being grown and given away, and seeds are being stored for the future, “to replant the forest after the wave of invasion has passed” (151). “Many of our traditional teachings recognize that certain species are our helpers and guides,” Kimmerer writes. “The Original Instructions remind us that we must return the favor. It is an honor to be the guardian of another species—an honor within each person’s reach that we too often forget. A Black Ash basket is a gift the reminds us of the gifts of other beings, gifts we can gratefully return through advocacy and care” (151). I wonder if something similar could be said about advocating on behalf of keeping what remains of the grasslands that once covered southern Saskatchewan, and fragments that are still under threat.

Making baskets teaches lessons. The basket begins with two splints arranged in a cross, the four directions, the sacred foundation of everything (151). Kimmerer pauses before continuing; she feels the way she does when she’s about to write something (152). “For me, writing is an act of reciprocity with the world; it is what I can give back in return for everything that has been given to me,” she states. “And now there’s another layer of responsibility, writing on a thin sheet of tree and hoping the words are worth it. Such a thought could make a person set down her pen” (152). The weaving is difficult at the beginning, but by the third row, the give and take, or reciprocity, of balanced tension starts to become a whole (152). “In weaving well-being for land and people, we need to pay attention to the lessons of the three rows,” she continues. “Ecological well-being and the laws of nature are always the first row. Without them, there is no basket of plenty” (152-53). The second circle can proceed once the first is in place; it “reveals material welfare, the subsistence of human needs,” economy built on ecology (153). “But with only two rows in place, the basket is still in jeopardy of falling apart. It’s only when the third row comes that the first two can hold together,” Kimmerer states:

Here is where ecology, economics, and spirit are woven together. By using materials as if they were a gift, and returning that gift through worthy use, we find balance. I think that third row goes by many names: Respect. Reciprocity. All Our Relations. I think of it as the spirit row. Whatever the name, the three rows represent recognition that our lives depend on one another, human needs being only one row in the basket that must hold us all. In relationship, the separate splints become a whole basket, sturdy and resilient enough to carry us into the future. (153)

Each basket the class makes is unique, and that’s a lesson, too, about how everyone is the same and yet different (154). 

All of this leaves Kimmerer looking at things differently: “I see the powwow circle with new eyes. I notice that the cedar arbor sheltering the drums is supported by poles set in the four directions. The drum, the heartbeat, calls us out to dance. There is one beat, but each dancer has a distinctive step” (154). And the baskets continue to prompt reflections. What would it be like to think about the lives given for ours, she asks? “To consider the tree in the Kleenex, the algae in the toothpaste, the oaks in the floor, the grapes in the wine; to follow back the thread of life in everything and pay it respect? Once you start, it’s hard to stop, and you begin to feel yourself awash in gifts” (154). That’s the central thrust of this book, of course—the idea of gifts, reciprocity, and gratitude.

And yet, she cannot consider the plastic on her desk in that way: “It is so far removed from the natural world. I wonder if that’s a place where the disconnection began, the loss of respect, when we could no longer easily see the life within the object” (155). That comment reminds me of Zoe Todd’s desire to come into relationship with petroleum products (see Todd). Like Kimmerer, I find that very difficult to do: we both know that the plastic, and the oil it came from, originated in life, millions of years ago. She writes, “being mindful in the vast network of hyperindustrialized goods really gives me a headache. We weren’t made for that sort of constant awareness. We’ve got work to do” (155). But, she continues, “every once in a while, with a basket in hand, or a peach or a pencil, there is that moment when the mind and spirit open to all the connections, to all the lives and our responsibility to use them well” (155).

The next chapter, “Mishkos Kenomagwen: The Teachings of Grass,” is structured like a scientific paper, a lab report, but the content is nothing like that. The introduction reflects on the smell of sweetgrass, “the sweet vanilla fragrance, beckoning” (156). The literature review follows Lena—it’s not immediately clear who she is: an Elder?—collecting sweetgrass, leaving tobacco as a gift (156-57). The plants show the need for respect by not returning if they are not collected with respect: mishkos kenomagwen (157). The hypothesis is whether different ways of harvesting sweetgrass might be the cause of its disappearance from its historic locales (157). Kimmerer wants to help, but she’s wary, because sweetgrass is a gift for her, not an experimental unit (158). But her graduate student, Laurie, is eager to work on research that will mean something to someone, but she had never seen sweetgrass before, so Kimmerer takes her to her restored sweetgrass meadows (158). It was “love at first sniff,” and Laurie found it easy to find the plant afterwards: “It was as if the plant wanted her to find it” (158).

Together, they designed an experiment to compare the effects of the two harvesting methods the basket makers had described, but she encouraged Laurie to “live out a slightly different style of research,” one that is less extractive than the scientific method, one that is “about listening and translating the knowledge of other beings” (158). Lena and other basket makers, by observing what happens when they collect sweetgrass, are engaged in experimental science (159). The faculty committee that approves research projects rejected Laurie’s proposal, though, because they did not recognize the Indigenous knowledge—if plants are used respectfully, they will flourish; if not, they will disappear—as theory, or that harvesting plants can help them grow (159). “Getting scientists to consider the validity of indigenous knowledge is like swimming upstream in cold, cold water,” Kimmerer writes. “They’ve been so conditioned to be skeptical of even the hardest of hard data that bending their minds towards theories that are verified without the expected graphs or equations is tough. Couple that with the unblinking assumption that science has cornered the market on truth and there’s not much room for discussion” (160). Nevertheless, Laurie came up with a careful method to compare two restored sweetgrass meadows. She didn’t make offerings to the plants—that would add a variable she didn’t understand—but Kimmerer suggests that she did show them “mindful respect” (161). “For two years she harvested and measured the response of the grass along with a team of student interns,” Kimmerer writes. “It was a little tough at first to recruit student helpers given that their task would be watching grass grow” (161).

Laurie’s research found that the plots that did not thrive 

were not the harvested ones, as predicted, but the unharvested controls. The sweetgrass that had not been picked or disturbed in any way was choked with dead stems while the harvested plots were thriving. Even though half of all stems had been harvested each year, they quickly grew back, completely replacing everything that had been gathered, in fact producing more shoots than were present before harvest. Picking sweetgrass seemed to actually stimulate growth. (162)

“Laurie’s graduate committee had dismissed this possibility from the outset,” Kimmerer notes. “They had been taught that harvesting causes decline. And yet the grasses themselves unequivocally argued the opposite point” (163). Laurie had data to support her findings, though.

“We are all the product of our worldviews—even scientists who claim pure objectivity,” Kimmerer writes (163). The scientists had been taught that the best way to preserve a resource was to keep people away from it, but the sweetgrass showed that humans are a vital part of its system (163). Laurie discovered that the effects she observed were well known to scientists studying grasslands, where fire and grazing stimulate growth (163). They are “adapted to disturbance” (164). Laurie explained how harvesting 

thinned the population, allowing the remaining shoots to respond to the extra space and light by reproducing quickly. Even the pulling method was beneficial. The underground stem that connects the shoots is dotted with buds. When gently tugged, the stem breaks and all those buds produce thrifty young shoots to fill the gap. (164)

Grazing makes grasses grow faster: “there is an enzyme in the saliva of grazing buffalo that actually stimulates grass growth. To say nothing of the fertilizer produced by a passing herd. Grass gives to buffalo and buffalo give to grass” (164). With its long history of cultural use, sweetgrass seems to have become dependent on human disturbance, which stimulates its compensatory growth (164). The decline of sweetgrass, then, might be due to underharvesting, not overharvesting (164). Areas where sweetgrass thrives are near Indigenous communities, particularly those where baskets are made (165). According to Kimmerer, “[s]weetgrass thrives where it is used and disappears elsewhere” (165).

For Kimmerer, as well as an example of the way that science and traditional languages “may converge when both truly listen to the plants,” this story is an example of reciprocity and respect (165). “The grass gives its fragrant self to us and we receive it with gratitude,” she writes. “In return, through the very act of accepting the gift, the pickers open some space, let the light come in, and with a gentle tug bestir the dormant buds that make new grass. Reciprocity is a matter of keeping the gift in motion through self-perpetuating cycles of giving and receiving” (165). But overharvesting—taking more than half—disrupts the balance of that relationship (166). Each plant is different, and each has its own way of regenerating, its own form of relationship with people. The differences between them need to be respected (166).

The next chapter is entitled “Maple Nation: A Citizenship Guide.” Kimmerer notes that maple trees outnumber humans in her community by “a hundred to one” (168). “In our Anishinaabe way, we count trees as people, ‘the standing people,’” and even though the government does not, there’s no doubt, to her, that “we live in the nation of maples” (168). “I’m thinking about what it would mean to declare citizenship in Maple Nation,” she continues (168). What would that mean? Paying taxes, “sharing in the support of your community” (168). The trees give generously: they give shade, they break the wind, “they create habitat for songbirds, and wildlife cover, leaves to shuffle through, tree forts and branches for swings” (168-69). They build the soil with their fallen leaves, generate oxygen, and provide other “ecosystem services, the structures and functions of the natural world that make life possible” (169). Those services don’t figure in calculations of human economic activity (170). 

Here Kimmerer turns to the activity in a sugar shack where the sap is boiled over a wood fire (170-71). “In Maple Nation, the currency is carbon,” she writes. “It is traded, exchanged, bartered among community members from atmosphere to tree to beetle to woodpecker to fungus to log to firewood to atmosphere and back to tree. No waste, shared wealth, balance, and reciprocity. What better model for a sustainable economy do we need?” (171). I wonder if she’s read Primo Levi’s essay on carbon, which comes to a similar conclusion from very different premises. 

Kimmerer researches the citizenship oaths of various human nations. Most are pledges of loyalty, of shared beliefs, of an agreement to obey the law (173). If she had to choose a place to invest her allegiance, she would choose the Maple Nation: “If citizenship is a matter of shared beliefs, then I believe in the democracy of species. If citizenship means an oath of loyalty to a leader, then I choose the leader of the trees. If good citizens agree to uphold the laws of the nation, then I choose natural law, the law of reciprocity, of regeneration, of mutual flourishing” (173). But rising temperatures are threatening the maple forests of the northeastern United States (173). The maples will have to move north, exiles because of cheap gasoline (173). She would trade cheap gas for maples (174). The maples, she concludes, deserve better: they need humans to speak up on their behalf (174). “Political action, civic engagement—these are powerful acts of reciprocity with the land,” she writes. “The Maple Nation Bill of Responsibilities asks us to stand up for the standing people, to lead with the wisdom of Maples” (174). I was wondering two chapters back about the need to advocate on behalf of the grasslands, and whether that would be a form of reciprocity. Kimmerer just answered that question for me.

The following chapter, “The Honorable Harvest,” begins with Kimmerer crossing a field in spring, carrying a basket, looking to pick wild leeks. She begins by addressing the plants as she’s been taught to do: “introducing myself in case they’ve forgotten, even though we’ve been meeting like this for years. I explain why I’ve come and ask their permission to harvest, inquiring politely if they would be willing to share” (175). She suggests that eating leeks in the spring is both food and medicine (175-76). The first clump she digs out has no bulbs, and she takes this as a refusal of permission to gather; she tucks the clump back into the soil and goes home (176). She envies the plants their chlorophyll, wishes she could photosynthesize so that she could do the work of the world by standing in the sun (176). “But this generosity is beyond my realm, as I am a mere heterotroph, a feeder on the carbon transmuted by others,” she writes. “In order to live, I must consume. That’s the way the world works, the exchange of a life for a life, the endless cycling between my body and the body of the world” (177). Once again I’m reminded of Primo Levi. She thinks about the moral question of extinguishing the lives of others on behalf of our own: “how do we consume in a way that does justice to the lives that we take?” (177). “In our oldest stories, we are reminded that this was a question of profound concern for our ancestors,” she notes, and that “conundrum” remains: “the need to resolve the inescapable tension between honoring life around us and taking it in order to live is part of being human” (177).

A few weeks later, Kimmerer goes out to pick wild leeks again. She chooses a different clump and asks for permission (177-78). “Asking permission shows respect for the personhood of the plant, but it is also an assessment of the well-being of the population. Thus I must use both sides of my brain to listen for the answer,” she writes (178). Is the population large enough to sustain a harvest? That’s an analytical, left-brain question (178). Are the plants willing to be taken? That’s an intuitive, right-brain question (178). “This time, when I push my trowel deep I come up with a thick cluster of gleaming white bulbs, plump, slippery, and aromatic,” she tells us. “I hear yes, so I make a gift from the soft old tobacco pouch in my pocket and begin to dig” (178).

Harvesting wild leeks can help them grow by thinning them out (178). But it’s important not to take too many—so Kimmerer doesn’t use a sharp shovel, which would encourage overharvesting: “Not everything should be convenient” (178-79). “The traditional ecological knowledge of indigenous harvesters is rich in prescriptions for sustainability,” she writes. “They are found in Native science and philosophy, in lifeways and practices, but most of all in stories, the ones that are told to help restore balance, to locate ourselves once again in the circle” (179). She relates a story told by the Anishinaabe Elder Basil Johnston about Nanabozho fishing for supper. He takes too many fish and empties the lake, thus learning a key rule: “never take more than you need” (179). “Cautionary stories of the consequences of taking too much are ubiquitous in Native cultures, but it’s hard to recall a single one in English,” she suggests. “Perhaps this helps to explain why we seem so caught in a trap of overconsumption, which is as destructive to ourselves as to those we consume” (179).

“Collectively, the indigenous canon of principles and practices that govern the exchange of life for life is known as the Honorable Harvest,” Kimmerer states. “They are rules of sorts that govern our taking, shape our relationships which the natural world, and rein in our tendency to consume—that the world might be as rich for the seventh generation as it is for our own” (180). She describes herself as a student of that way of thinking, rather than a scholar, and says that she struggles “to participate in the Honorable Harvest” (180). She listens to those who are wiser than she is (180). “What I share here, in the same way they were shared with me, are seeds gleaned from the fields of their collective wisdom, the barest surface, the moss on the mountains of their knowledge,” she continues. “I feel grateful for their teachings and responsible for passing them on as best I can” (180).

She notes that traditional peoples have harvest guidelines, “based on sophisticated ecological knowledge and long-term monitoring of populations” (180-81). Settlers were amazed at the abundance of nature on Turtle Island, noting that Indigenous people didn’t harvest all the wild rice on the lakes (181). The settlers took this as evidence of laziness, not understanding “how indigenous land-care practices might contribute to the wealth they encountered” (181). Other creatures like rice, after all, and the rice itself needs to reseed: “Our teachings tell us to never take more than half” (182). Nor should one take the first plant one sees, because it might be the only one (182). Kimmerer writes down the rules of the Honorable Harvest, even though they aren’t codified but “reinforced in small acts of daily life” (183) Unlike the state guidelines on hunting and gathering, the rules of the Honorable Harvest “are based on accountability to both the physical and the metaphysical worlds” (183). Nonhuman beings are also persons, after all, “vested with awareness, intelligence, spirit—and who have families waiting for them at home” (183). “Killing a who demands something different than killing an it,” she writes. “When you regard those nonhuman persons as kinfolk, another set of harvesting regulations extends beyond bag limits and legal seasons” (183). The rules of the Honorable Harvest are also agreements between providers and consumers, in which the providers have the upper hand (184).

Kimmerer imagines what it would be like if the Honorable Harvest were the law now, as in the past (184). “Imagine if a developer, eyeing open land for a shopping mall, had to ask the goldenrod, the meadowlarks, and the monarch butterflies for permission to take their homeland,” she writes. “What if he had to abide by the answer? Why not?” (184). She realizes that people, even Indigenous people, struggle with the self-restraint that would involve: “The dictum to take only what you need leaves a lot of room for interpretation when our needs get so tangled with our wants” (184). That’s the reason for an even more primal rule, “an old teaching nearly forgotten now in the din of industry and technology. Deeply rooted in cultures of gratitude, this ancient rule is not just to take only what you need, but to take only that which is given” (184). It’s a question of manners, on an individual level, but as a culture “we seem unable to extend these good manners to the natural world. The dishonorable harvest has become a way of life—we take what doesn’t belong to us and destroy it beyond repair: Onondaga Lake, the Alberta tar sands, the rainforests of Malaysia, the list is endless” (185). “How do we find the Honorable Harvest again?” Kimmerer asks (185). “How can we distinguish between that which is given by the earth and that which is not? When does taking become outright theft?” (185). Here she’s talking about extraction, to use the term in vogue at the moment. It’s an essential question, and he answer is that “each of us must find our own way” (185). “Discerning all that it might mean is like bush-whacking through dense undergrowth,” she writes. “Sometimes I get faint glimpses of a deer trail” (185).

Here Kimmerer turns to a fall afternoon at Onondaga, listening to men telling stories about hunting, and one story in particular, about the deer that offers itself to the hunter’s lone bullet (186). That’s why he thanks the deer, the Elder telling that story says, for its generosity in feeding the people (186). The Honorable Harvest is an inspiration and a model for what we should do: eat food that’s been harvested honorably, celebrate every mouthful, use technologies that minimize harm, take what is given (186-87). “This philosophy guides not only our taking of food, but also any taking of the gifts of Mother Earth—air, water, and the literal body of the earth: the rocks and soil and fossil fuel,” she writes (187). Doing irreparable damage to the earth through coal mining, she continues, is by no stretch of the imagination accepting a gift: “We have to wound the land and water to gouge it from Mother Earth” (187). “It doesn’t mean that we can’t consume the energy we need, but it does mean that we honorably take what is given”: energy from the sun, the wind, the tides, which are “consistent with the ancient rules of the Honorable Harvest” (187). 

Once Kimmerer gave a lecture on “Cultures of Gratitude” at a private college with expensive tuition (187). She told a story about what happened when the fields were so generous that people stopped treating the corn with respect (187-88). Saddened, the Corn Spirit left the people, going where she thought she would be appreciated (188). Only when the people relearned gratitude would she return (188). The students in the audience yawned: they couldn’t imagine such a thing. One young woman could, though; she said that Kimmerer’s words reminded her of her grandmother in Turkey, who never wasted anything (188-89). Kimmerer realizes that gratitude is important, but suggests that “we are called to go beyond cultures of gratitude, to once again become cultures of reciprocity” (189). Notions of sustainability don’t go far enough; we need to be thinking about how we can give back (189-90). That’s what the Honourable Harvest asks of us: reciprocity (190). “One of our responsibilities as human people is to find ways to enter into reciprocity with the more-than-human world,” Kimmerer writes. “We can do it through gratitude, through ceremony, through land stewardship, science, art, and in everyday acts of practical reverence” (190).

Next Kimmerer describes what she learned from a trapper. He abandoned that trade because he found leg-hold traps to be cruel (191). He worked in mines in Sudbury, where the smelters’ emissions killed the forests; he again felt blood on his hands, and he quit (191). He returned to trapping, using the old brain tanning technique to prepare the hides (191). He is careful to only catch male martens, because catching a female means he has taken too many (192). He feeds the female martens with fish guts dumped on platforms in the trees (193). “Feeding mama martens is not altruism; it is deep respect for the way the world works, for the connections between us, of life flowing into life,” she writes. “The more he gives, the more he can take, and he goes the extra mile to give more than he takes” (194). “A harvest is made honorable when it sustains the giver as well as the taker,” she continues (194). That trapper is giving back what was given to him (194). 

“The canon of the Honorable Harvest is poised to make its comeback,” Kimmerer writes, “as people remember that what’s good for the land is also good for the people” (195). Acts of restoration are needed, not only for the lands and waters, “but also for our relationship to the world. We need to restore honor to the way we live, so that when we walk through the world we don’t have to avert our eyes with shame, so that we can hold our heads up high and receive the respectful acknowledgement of the reset of the earth’s beings” (195). But how can people who live in cities participate in the Honorable Harvest? “We can use our dollars as the indirect currency of reciprocity,” she suggests; we can try to make sure that what we buy is not complicit in the dishonourable harvest (195). We can reuse and compost and recycle (196). We can choose to buy organic produce (196). It’s not easy, and we each will have to do what we can (196). So Kimmerer buys recycled paper to write on, but has trouble finding pens that have not been dishonourably harvested (197-98). “I’ve been trying hard to make this work, but what I feel in the woods, the pulsing animacy, is simply not here,” she states. “I realize why the tenets of reciprocity don’t work here, why this glittering labyrinth seems to make a mockery of the Honorable Harvest. it’s so obvious, but I didn’t see it, so intent was I on searching for the lives behind the products. I couldn’t find them because the lives aren’t here. Everything for sale here is dead” (198). It hurts Kimmerer to bring notions of the Honourable Harvest to the shopping mall; she wants to protect them, “shelter them from the onslaught of their antithesis,” even though she knows that they are stronger than that (199). “It’s not the Honorable Harvest that is the aberration,” she writes: “it is this marketplace” (199). The Honourable Harvest cannot survive in this habitat; the mall’s bounty offers an illusion, a pretence that the products it contains have not been “ripped from the earth” (199). 

At home, Kimmerer prepares the wild leeks for dinner. She leaves one handful unwashed, and later carries them to the tiny patch of forest above her pond to plant them (199). “The harvesting process now unfolds in reverse,” she writes. “I ask permission to bring them here, to open the earth for their arrival” (199-200). She notes that areas that have reforested themselves after being ploughed have no flowers growing beneath the trees, no medicines, and that scientists don’t understand why (200). So she plants the leeks there (200). It’s her responsibility to help the regrown forest (200). She hopes that the leeks will return by the time she is old (200).

“We need the Honorable Harvest today,” Kimmerer concludes. “But like the leeks and the marten, it is an endangered species that arose in another landscape, another time, from a legacy of traditional knowledge. That ethic of reciprocity was cleared away along with the forests, the beauty of justice traded away for more stuff” (200). If the earth is inanimate, if our lives are just commodities, “then the way of the Honorable Harvest, too, is dead” (200-01). “But when you stand in the stirring spring woods, you know otherwise,” she writes. “It is an animate earth that we hear calling to us to feed the martens and kiss the rice. Wild leeks and wild ideas are in jeopardy. We have to transplant them both and nurture their return to the lands of their birth. We have to carry them across the wall, restoring the Honorable Harvest, bringing back the medicine” (201). If we can’t do that, then we are doomed, I think, although it might be too late to adopt that ethos, new to us but still older than we are. I don’t think Kimmerer is being romantic here; I think she’s being reasonable.

The book’s fourth section is “Braiding Sweetgrass.” Its first chapter is “In the Footsteps of Nanabozho: Becoming Indigenous to Place.” I will have to be careful here; that title might suggest that it’s possible for a settler like me to become indigenous to a place, and everything I’ve learned over the past couple of years tells me that’s a dangerous desire, one that can only serve to further displace the people who have been displaced by my presence on this land. Indeed, she begins by suggesting that Skywoman was an immigrant, that she’s also new where she’s standing, on the coast of the Pacific Ocean (205). Then she turns to Nanabozho, the powerful spirit-being, “the personfication of life forces, the Anishinaabe culture hero, and our great teacher of how to be human. In Nanabozho’s form as Original Man and in our own, we humans are the newest arrivals on earth, the youngsters, just learning to find our way” (205). Fair enough—I like the humility of that perspective, but of course the newest arrivals on Turtle Island are the settlers whose way of thinking and behaving are so destructive. Perhaps she’s not thinking about us. I hope we’re excluded from this story.

Kimmerer suggests that because he was new to the world, Nanabozho was also an immigrant. The Creator gave him tasks: he was to walk through the world with each step being a greeting to Mother Earth (206). He followed the paths made by other creatures (206). This all happened long ago, but Kimmerer argues that time is a circle, not a linear straight line, so that the stories of Nanabozho are both history and prophecy (207). He did his best to follow the Original Instructions “and tried to become native to his new home” (207). The legacy of Nanabozho is that we are still trying, even though “the instructions have gotten tattered along the way and many have been forgotten” (207).

Kimmerer now turns to consider settlers: “some of the wisest of Native elders still puzzle over the people who came to our shores. They look at the toll on the land and say, ‘The problem with these new people is that they don’t have both feet on the shore. One is still on the boat. They don’t seem to know whether they’re staying or not’” (207). That rootlessness is characteristic of American life (207). “For the sake of the peoples and the land, the urgent work of the Second Man may be to set aside the ways of the colonist and become indigenous to place,” Kimmerer says. “But can Americans, as a nation of immigrants, learn to live here as if we were staying? With both feet on the shore?” (207). Who is “the Second Man” in that sentence? Nanabozho is the “Original Man” (205), but surely settlers aren’t “the Second Man,” although that’s the way we seem to be invited to understand that sentence. No: I’m confusing “Original Man” with “First Man.” “First Man” represents Indigenous peoples; “Original Man” is Nanabozho; “Second Man” represents settlers.

Kimmerer has more questions: “What happens when we truly become native to a place, when we finally make a home? Where are the stories that lead the way? If time does in fact eddy back on itself, maybe the journey of the First Man will provide footsteps to guide the journey of the Second” (207). What is the difference between being a settler and making a home, though? Métis artist David Garneau suggests that it might be possible for a settler like me “to home in these territories without trying to settle them” (Garneau). Is Kimmerer suggesting something similar? 

Nanabozho’s journey took him east, towards the rising sun (207). He was hungry and not sure how to find his way (207). He knew that all the knowledge he needed to live was present in the land and that his role was to learn how to be human from the world (208). The east is the direction of knowledge, and Nanabozho got to know semaa, the sacred tobacco, and how to use it to carry his thoughts to the Creator (208). He was given a new responsibility: to learn the names of the beings in the world (208). He spoke with them to learn about the gifts they carried (208). He learned to greet the other creatures by their names (208).

But today, “[m]ost people don’t know the names of these relatives; in fact, they hardly even see them. Names are the way we humans build relationship, not only with each other but with the living world” (208). Kimmerer can’t imagine “what it would be like going through life not knowing the names of the plants and animals around you” (208). She thinks it would be “scary and disorienting—like being lost in a foreign city where you can’t read the street signs” (208). She suggests that “[p]hilosophers call this state of isolation and disconnection ‘species loneliness’—a deep, unnamed sadness stemming from estrangement from the rest of Creation, from the loss of relationship” (208-09). Human dominance of the world has led to more isolation (209). Here the account of Nanabozho gets a little confusing. Kimmerer suggests that he names the animals rather than learning the names they already had, and compares him to Linnaeus, the Swedish biologist who invented scientific nomenclature (209). She imagines Nanabozho and Linnaeus travelling together, looking at plants (209). 

Then Nanabozho travels south. If the east is the direction of knowledge (208), the south is the direction of birth and growth (209). That’s the direction spring comes from (209). He learns the teachings of cedar, kizhig, there (209). Nanabozho learns what he can eat by watching what the animals ate (209-10). He was also taught by the plants (210). These elder brothers and sisters inspired Nanabozho to make new things in order to survive: the Whale inspired the canoe; the Beaver showed him how to make an axe; the Spider’s web became a fishing net; the Squirrels showed him how to make maple sugar (210). “The lessons Nanabozho learned are the mythic roots of Native science, medicine, architecture, agriculture, and ecological knowledge,” Kimmerer writes (210).

Nanabozho sang loudly as he walked, and blundered into a Grizzly. After that, he “learned to sit quietly at the edge of the woods and wait to be invited” (210). He became grateful for the abilities of the other creatures “and he came to understand that to carry a gift is also to carry a responsibility” (211). “Every being with a gift, every being with a responsibility,” Kimmerer tells us. “he considered his own empty hands. He had to rely on the world to take care of him” (211).

“Had the new people learned what Original Man was taught at a council of animals—never damage Creation, and never interfere with the sacred purpose of another being—the eagle would look down on a different world,” Kimmerer continues. “The salmon would be crowding up the rivers, and passenger pigeons would darken the sky” (211). Kimmerer herself would be speaking Potawatomi (211). “We would see what Nanabozho saw,” she writes. “It does not bear too much imagining, for in that direction lies heartbreak” (211). 

“Against the backdrop of that history, an invitation to settler society to become indigenous to place feels like a free ticket to a housebreaking party,” Kimmerer admits. So she is talking about us. “It cold be read as an open invitation to take what little is left. Can settlers be trusted to follow Nanabozho, to walk so that ‘each step is a greeting to Mother Earth?” (211). She feels grief and fear and those emotions “try to hold my heart closed” (211). And yet, she continues, “the grief is the settlers’ as well. They too will never walk in a tallgrass prairie where sunflowers dance with goldfinches. Their children have also lost the chance to sing at the Maple Dance. They can’t drink the water either” (211-12).

On Nanabozho’s journey to the north, he met medicine teachers who gave him sweetgrass “to teach him the ways of compassion, kindness, and healing, even for those who made bad mistakes, for who has not?” (212). “To become indigenous is to grow the circle of healing to include all of Creation,” Kimmerer suggests. “A path scented with sweetgrass leads to a landscape of forgiveness and healing for all who need it. She doesn’t give her gift only to some” (212).

In the west, Nanabozho found many frightening things: earthquakes and great fires (212). Sage, the sacred plant of the west, helped him overcome his fear (212). He learned that fire can destroy, but it can also create—that all things have that duality—and he learned that he has a twin brother devoted to making imbalance, just as Nanabozho was devoted to making balance (212). “Nanabozho vowed to walk with humility in order to balance his twin’s arrogance,” Kimmerer writes. “That too is the task of those who would walk in his footsteps” (212).

Kimmerer is still thinking about immigrants, and her thoughts are tangled. “Like my elders before me, I want to envision a way that an immigrant society could become indigenous to place, but I’m stumbling on the words. Immigrants cannot by definition be indigenous. Indigenous is a birthright word. No amount of time or caring changes history or substitutes for soul-deep fusion with the land,” she writes (213). But, she continues, “if people do not feel ‘indigenous,’ can they nevertheless enter into the deep reciprocity that renews the world? Is this something that can be learned? Where are the teachers?” (213). She thinks about the Elder who says that the land has been teaching settlers all along. I don’t see any evidence of that learning. Perhaps Kimmerer doesn’t, either.

She notices some plantain growing in the woods. The Potawatomi call this plant “White Man’s Footstep” because it followed settlers everywhere they went (213). At first, the Potawatomi didn’t trust that plant, because of its association with the settlers, but they also knew that “all things have a purpose and that we must not interfere with its fulfillment,” so “they began to learn about its gifts”: as a cooked vegetable in spring, as a poultice, as an aid to digestion and an antiseptic (213-14). “This wise and generous plant, faithfully following the people, became an honored member of the plant community,” she writes. “It’s a foreigner, an immigrant, but after five hundred years of living as a good neighbor, people forget that kind of thing” (214). But other immigrant plants are invaders, leaving destruction behind them: garlic mustard, tamarisk, loosestrife, kudzu, cheat grass (214). Nevertheless, plantain isn’t like that: “Its strategy was to be useful, to fit into small places, to coexist with others around the dooryard, to heal wounds” (214). It’s become naturalized (214). Perhaps settlers could become naturalized by learning to “uphold Nanabozho’s Original Instructions, too” (214).

“Maybe the task assigned to Second man is to unlearn the model of kudzu and follow the teachings of White Man’s Footstep, to strive to become naturalized to place, to throw off the mind-set of the immigrant,” Kimmerer concludes. “Being naturalized to place means to live as if this is the land that feeds you, as if these are the streams from which you drink, that build your body and fill your spirit” (214). I’m not certain that what she’s describing is possible—that settlers aren’t more like kudzu than plantain, that we cannot change our ways. Individuals might be able to, but our system of living and thinking is too badly broken. It’s particularly hard to imagine when unmarked graves are being discovered at the sites of former Indian residential schools in this country—discoveries which make me wonder if settlers deserve such generosity and kindness. Nonetheless, she wonders if White Man’s Footstep isn’t following in the steps of Nanabozho: “Perhaps Plantain will line the homeward path. We could follow. White Man’s Footstep, generous and healing, grows with its leaves so close to the ground that each step is a greeting to Mother Earth” (215).

The next chapter, “The Sound of Silverbells,” takes Kimmerer back to an experience teaching in the southern US, in the Bible Belt, where students were not interested in ecology (216-17). She took her students on a three-day field trip into the Great Smoky Mountains in an effort to convert “their scientific souls” (217). “I had a whole three days to be subversive, to distract them from Homo sapiens for a glimpse of the six million other species with whom we share the planet,” she recalls (218). It was early spring, and the woods were filled with wildflowers (218). The group wandered up the mountains, “traversing elevational zones from deep cove forests of tulip poplar and cucumber magnolia to the summits. The lush coves were a garden of wildflowers, glossy patches of wild ginger and nine species of trillium,” but the students were looking “without much apparent interest” (219). One student even asked if this was her religion (220). “I should have just answered yes,” she states (221). On the last day of the trip, she recalls, “I knew that I had failed. I had failed to teach the kind of science that I had longed for as a young student seeking the secret of Asters and Goldenrod, a science deeper than data” (221). She had imparted information but not how to respond to the world as a gift (221). Then one student started to sing “Amazing Grace” (221). “I was humbled,” she writes. “Their singing said everything that my well-intentioned lectures did not” (222). They hadn’t missed the point after all. “I’ll never forget that moment,” she concludes. “The worst teacher in the world or the best teacher in the world—neither can be heard over the voices of Silverbells and Hermit Thrushes” (222). “The land is the real teacher,” she continues. “All we need as students is mindfulness. Paying attention is a form of reciprocity with the living world, receiving the gifts with open eyes and open heart” (222). That Sunday afternoon changed the way she teaches: “A teacher comes, they say, when you are ready. And if you ignore its presence, it will speak to you more loudly. But you have to be quiet to hear” (222). I find myself wondering what kind of impact those three days did have on the students, and how long it lasted, but I wasn’t present to hear the students’ song, and so who am I to say the effects would have been temporary at best?

The next chapter, “Sitting In a Circle,” is also about teaching—in particular, one student, Brad, who is not enthusiastic to be at a remote biological research station for five weeks (223). After just a few days there, at Cranberry Lake Biological Station, most students “start to metamorphose into field biologists,” but Kimmerer notes that “when we put scientific instruments in their hands they trust their own senses less,” and “when they put more energy into memorizing Latin names, they spend less time looking at the beings themselves” (224). So, at the beginning of her ethnobotany class, she has the students brainstorm a list of human needs and think about which ones the Adirondack plants might be able to meet (224). Then the students build their classroom—which looks like a wigwam (224-25). 

Meanwhile, Brad is still unhappy. Kimmerer tries to cheer him up by saying that they’re going shopping, although their “store” is the marsh across the lake (225). They are going to gather cattails for the walls of the classroom—in the water (226). The cattail rhizomes can be roasted in the fire or turned into flour or porridge. The leaves are a source of string and twine (227). Back at the camp, they start cleaning the cattails (227). They discover the cattail gel at the base of the leaves, which is soothing on sunburn (228). The leaves are water repellent as well, and in the old days they would be sewn together to make the walls for a summer wigwam and mats for sleeping (228). One student says, “It’s almost as if the plants made these things for us” (228). The things that help the plants to survive are useful to people and increase their likelihood of survival: “The plants adapt, the people adopt” (229). In the centre of the leaves is a “soft column of white pith as thick as your pinkie and as crisp as a summer squash”; it tastes like cucumber (229). The places where they were harvesting are visible in the marsh, and the students discuss their own impact (229). The pollen of the cattails “can be added to biscuits and pancakes, adding nutritional value and a beautiful golden color,” and the female half of the stalk can be boiled and eaten; it tastes like artichokes (230). The fluff of the flowers can be used to stuff pillows or bedding; Potawatomi people used it for diapers (230). The flowers can also be dipped in fat and used as torches, and the fluff was used as tinder for starting fires (230). Within a few days, the teaching wigwam has walls, and birch bark has been gathered for the roof (231-32).

Freshwater marshes are productive—a place where fish spawn, frogs and salamanders and birds live—and “hunger for this productive land precipitated a 90 percent loss of the wetlands—as well as the Native people who depended upon them” (231). Because the cattails build rich soil, wetlands are in demand for cropland, although in some places they’ve been drained and paved over for parking (231). In this province, the destruction of wetlands—unregulated by the provincial government—has increased flooding in rural areas and damaging the quality of surface water sources (“We’re Losing Our Wetlands”). The ecosystem needs wetlands, but people need them, too.

“I used to teach the way I was taught, but now I let someone else do all the work for me,” Kimmerer writes. “If plants are our oldest teachers, why not let them teach?” (232). On this day, they are harvesting the roots of white spruce to stitch together their birch bark roof (232). “In gathering roots, just plunging will get you nothing but a hole,” she continues. “We have to unlearn hurrying. This is all about slowness” (233). She asks the spruce trees for permission to gather some roots (233). She uses a knife to cut open the humus beneath the trees (233). The roots of many different plants are visible (233). They search for the spruce roots: “A dozen roots are exposed, and somehow you need to choose one and follow it without breaking it, so that you have one great, long continuous strand. It’s not easy” (235). While harvesting a few roots won’t do any damage, they put the soil and mosses back carefully, emptying their water bottles over the wilting leaves when they are finished (235). The students are quiet, concentrating, then one starts to sing: “It happens every time” (235). The smell of humus releases the hormone oxytocin, which promotes bonding between mother and child or between lovers, in our brains: “No wonder we sing in response” (236).

They clean and peel the roots and weave baskets. “Imperfect they may be, but I believe they are a beginning of a reweaving of the bond between people and the land,” Kimmerer writes (237). The roof is sewn onto the wigwam (237). The students sit together, weaving and talking (237). The cattail gives people all they need to live (237). Kimmerer thinks about Mother Earth: “How can we ever reciprocate such a wealth of care? Knowing that she carries us, could we shoulder a burden for her?” (238). One student asks what they can do in return for the earth’s gifts. Gratitude is important, but Kimmerer thinks that “we humans gifts in addition to gratitude that we might offer in return. The philosophy of reciprocity is beautiful in the abstract, but the practical is harder” (238). So what is the ethical duty to compensate those plants for what they’ve given (239). Kimmerer loves to listen to her students discussing these questions, and she feels humbled by the creativity of the solutions they offer (239). “The gifts they might return to cattails are as diverse as those the cattails gave them,” she writes. “This is our work, to discover what we can give. Isn’t this the purpose of education, to learn the nature of your own gifts and how to use them for good in the world?” (239).

Kimmerer also realizes “that caring is not abstract. The circle of ecological compassion we feel is enlarged by direct experience of the living world, and shrunken by its lack” (239). “It takes real effort to remember that it’s not just in a wigwam that the earth gives us everything we need,” she continues. “The exchange of recognition, gratitude, and reciprocity for these gifts is just as important in a Brooklyn flat as under a birch bark roof” (240). 

The next chapter, “Burning Cascade Head,” begins with “prodigal salmon coming home” (241). They are greeted by a welcome feast (242). Kimmerer is thinking about the past, about how things were in the Pacific northwest before settlers arrived. The people set fire to the grass headland near the ocean as a way of welcoming the salmon home (242). After the salmon have been running upriver for four days, the people begin to fish (243). The salmon fed the people, but also the forests (244). Then disease arrives on the Oregon coast in the 1830s (245). By the time settlers arrived around 1850, the villages were ghost towns (245). They began draining the marshes in the estuaries, which have “the highest biodiversity and productivity of any wetland,” changing the river “from a capillary system to a single straightened flow to hurry the river to the sea,” a disaster for young salmon who could no longer ease themselves from freshwater to salt (245-46). The salmon were no longer honoured, and the construction of dams upstream “reduced spawning to nil” (246). “The commodity mind-set drove fish that had fed the people for thousands of years close to extinction,” Kimmerer writes (246). Fewer and fewer fish returned, and no ceremonies welcomed them (246). 

Kimmerer hikes on a trail up a mountain in Oregon, onto the headland where the fires were once set to welcome the salmon home (246-47). Knowing the story about the rivers and the salmon, she cries tears of both joy and grief: “Joy for the being of the shimmering world and grief for what we have lost” (248). The other walkers there “look like they’re trying to remember what it would be like to love the world” (248).

“It is an odd dichotomy we have set for ourselves, between loving people and loving land,” Kimmerer writes. “We know that loving a person has agency and power—we know it can change everything. yet we act as if loving the land is an internal affair that has no energy outside the confines of our head and heart” (248). Burning the grass headland “cemented the people’s connection to salmon, to each other, and to the spirit world, but it also created biodiversity,” creating “the headland meadows that are home to fire-dependent species that occur nowhere else on earth” (248). The First Salmon Ceremony, a feast “of love and gratitude,” wasn’t just “internal emotional expressions but actually aided the upstream passage of the fish by releasing them from predation at a critical time. Laying salmon bones back in the streams returned nutrients to the system. These are ceremonies of practical reverence” (248-49).

“Ceremony focuses attention so that attention becomes intention,” Kimmerer continues. “If you stand together and profess a thing before your community, it holds you accountable” (249). And, she states, “[c]eremonies transcend the boundaries of the individual and resonate beyond the human realm. These acts of reverence are powerfully pragmatic. These are ceremonies that magnify life” (249). In many Indigenous communities, ceremony remains strong, although in settler society, it has withered away (249). The ceremonies that remain—birthdays, weddings, funerals, graduations—focus on ourselves; they are rites of personal transition (249). That doesn’t mean they are unimportant or that they have no effects (250). “But imagine standing by the river, flooded with those same feelings as the Salmon march into the auditorium of their estuary,” she writes:

Rise in their honor, thank them for all the ways they have enriched our lives, sing to honor their hard work and accomplishments against all odds, tell them they are our hope for the future, encourage them to go off into the world to grow, and pray that they will come home. Then the feating begins. Can we extend our bonds of celebration and support from our own species to the others who need us? (250)

Settler ceremonies tend to be brought from somewhere else, while Indigenous ceremonies honour other species and events in the seasons’ annual cycles (250). 

“To have agency in the world, ceremonies should be reciprocal co-creations, organic in nature, in which the community creates ceremony and the ceremony creates communities,” Kimmerer writes (250). Ceremonies should not be appropriated from Indigenous peoples, but “generating new ceremony in today’s world is hard to do” (250). She wants to see ceremonies that have “an active, reciprocal relationship with the more-than-human world,” that are not commercialized (251). “I want to stand by the river in my finest dress. I want to sing, strong and hard, and stomp my feet with a hundred others so that the waters hum with our happiness,” she states. “I want to dance for the renewal of the world” (251).

Today, a different kind of First Salmon Ceremony happens, as the U.S. Forest Service and partner organizations led by Oregon State University dismantle the human structures that have damaged the estuary (251). Research scientists participate in that work (251). “Doing science with awe and humility is a powerful act of reciprocity with the more-than-human world,” Kimmerer suggests (252). Ecologists are motivated by a desire to form intimacy and respect with other species “that is rivaled only by the observations of traditional knowledge holders. It too can be a path to kinship” (252). 

And that ceremony was successful: “When the dikes and dams were removed, the land did remember how to be a salt marsh. Water remembered how it was supposed to distribute itself through tiny drainage channels in the sediment. Insects remembered where they were supposed to lay their eggs. Today the natural curvaceous flow of the river has been restored” (252). The salmon are returning (252).

According to Kimmerer, the First Salmon Ceremonies were for the salmon, not for the people, “and for all the glittering realms of Creation, for the renewal of the world. People understood that when lives are given on their behalf they have received something precious. Ceremonies are a way to give something precious in return” (252-53). The essay ends by juxtaposing the traditional ceremonies it began with against the scientists waiting for the salmon to return, one single microscope light “blazing a tiny beacon into the night, calling the salmon back home” (253).

“Putting Down Roots,” the next chapter, begins along the Mohawk River. When the Mohawk people lived there, before they were pushed out by waves of settlers, “the river was full of fish and its spring floods brought silt to fertilize their cornfields. Sweetgrass, called wenserakon ohonte in Mohawk, flourished on the banks” (254-55). But settlers and their governments worked to eradicate Haudenosaunee languages and culture (255). 

Kimmerer and a research team of graduate students are planting sweetgrass on the banks of the river (255-56). She thinks about baskets, both the ones made of sweetgrass and the ones made of black ash, both of which grow along the rivers, in wetlands, and which “are reunited as neighbors in the Mohawk baskets. Braids of sweetgrass are woven among the splints of ash” (256). 

The St. Lawrence River, blocked by power dams, is now a site of heavy industry and pollution, where fishermen can no longer eat what they catch (257). In 1993, Tom Powter and a group of friends left the Akwesasne reservation for 400 acres of woods and farms in the Mohawk Valley, at a place called Kanatsiohareke, the site of an ancient Mohawk village (257). The project was intended to be a reversal of boarding schools: “Kanatsiohareke would return to the people what was taken from them—their language, their culture, their spirituality, their identity. The children of the lost generation could come home” (258). Saving the language by teaching it to children was essential (258). Kimmerer wanted to contribute the bringing back the sweetgrass (259). “The history of the plants is inextricably tied up with the history of the people, with the forces of destruction and creation,” Kimmerer writes (261). When settlers arrived, they brought their own plants, including weeds, which supplanted the native species:

Plants mirror changes in culture and ownership of land. Today this field is choked by a vigorous sward of foreign plants that the first sweetgrass pickers would not recognize: quackgrass, timothy, clover, daisies. A wave of invasive purple loosestrife threatens from along the slough. To restore sweetgrass here we’ll need to loosen the hold of the colonists, opening a way for the return of the natives. (261)

Sweetgrass rarely makes viable seeds; instead, it spreads by rhizomes (262). “But those tender white rhizomes cannot make their way across a highway or a parking lot,” Kimmerer notes. “When a patch of sweetgrass was lost to the plow it cold not be replenished by seed from outside” (262). Development and draining of wetlands and invasion of nonnative species all contribute to the disappearance of sweetgrass (262).

Kimmerer has been growing sweetgrass in nursery stocks at her university (262). “But cultivation is miles removed from restoration,” Kimmerer continues:

The science of restoration ecology depends upon myriad other factors—soil, insects, pathogens, herbivores, competition. Plants are seemingly equipped with their own sense about where they will live, defying the predictions of science, for there is yet another dimension to sweetgrass’ requirements. The most vigorous stands are the ones tended by basket makers. Reciprocity is a key to success. When the sweetgrass is cared for and treated with respect, it will flourish, but if the relationship fails, so does the plant. (262)

All of this might explain why the sweetgrass I planted in our yard 20 years ago quickly disappeared: I would never have thought of picking any of the grass for any purpose. Kimmerer is engaged in more than just an ecological restoration: she is trying to restore a relationship between plants and people (263). “We are dreaming of a time when the land might give thanks for the people,” she writes (263).

Kimmerer thinks about how the Carlisle boarding school robbed her of the chance to learn stories about sweetgrass from her grandfather (263-64). She writes about “ceremonies of remembrance and reconciliation” held at that school on the occasion of the city’s tricentennial (265). “Forgiveness was hard to find,” she writes (265). But, she continues, “grief can also be comforted by creation, by rebuilding the homeland that was taken. The fragments, like ash splints, can be rewoven into a new whole. And so we are here along the river, kneeling in the earth with the smell of sweetgrass in our hands” (266). 

The next essay, “Umbilicaria: The Belly Button of the World,” is about a variety of lichen, umbilicaria, which grows on rocks, among other places. “They blur the definition of what it means to be an individual, as a lichen is not one being, but two: a fungus and an alga,” Kimmerer tells us. “These partners are as different as could be and yet are joined in a symbiosis so close that their union becomes a wholly new organism” (269). She thinks about that symbiosis as a marriage (269-70). She describes how the symbiosis works (270-71). The fungus and the alga only come together under harsh, stressful conditions (272). “These ancients carry teachings in the ways that they live,” Kimmerer writes. “They remind us of the enduring power that arises from mutualism, from the sharing of the gifts carried by each species. Balanced reciprocity has enabled them to flourish under the most stressful of conditions. Their success is measured not by consumption and growth, but by graceful longevity and simplicity, by persistence while the world changed around them” (275). Umbilicaria is sensitive to air pollution (275). It has “the responsibility of building up life and in an eyeblink of earth’s history we have set about undermining their work to usher in a time of great environmental stress, a barrenness of our own making” (275). Kimmerer suspects that lichens will endure, and humans could, too, if we would listen to their teachings (275-76). She notes that in Asia, Umbilicaria is called “the ear of the stone,” and she wonders if it will listen to “our anguish when we understand what we have done” (276).

“Old-Growth Children,” the following chapter, is about the Douglas fir and coastal rainforests (277). Those forests are quiet now, but there was a time when people were here (277). These are the biggest trees in the world, trees that were born before Columbus sailed (278). But the trees are only the beginning: “The numbers of species of mammals, birds, amphibians, wildflowers, ferns, mosses, lichens, fungi, and insects are staggering” (278). These were among the greatest forests on earth, and “Native peoples of the coastal Pacific Northwest made rich livelihoods here for millennia, living with one foot in the forest and one on the shore, gathering the abundance of both” (278). Cedar trees provided canoes, paddles, fishing floats, nets, ropes, arrows, and harpoons (278). Even the waterproof capes and hats of the paddlers were made from the cedar (278). “Along the creeks and bottomlands, the women sang their way down well-worn trails to find just the right tree for each purpose,” Kimmerer writes. “Whatever they needed they asked for respectfully, and for whatever they received they offered prayers and gifts in return” (278). “When sickness came, the people turned again to her,” Kimmerer continues, noting that the trees are sources of physical and spiritual medicine (279).  Kimmerer notes that the coastal peoples were wealthy, and that “extraordinary art, science, and architecture flowered in their midst” (279). The potlatch tradition reflected “the generosity of the land to the people” (279-80). “Cedar unstintingly provided for the people, who responded with gratitude and reciprocity,” Kimmerer writes (280).

Kimmerer now shifts to the present, to a forester, Franz Dolp, who is walking through the contemporary forest (280). It’s a different place, scarred by logging (281). “Only at the top of Mary’s Peak, within the boundaries of a preserve, is there a continuous span of forest, rough textured and multihued from a distance, the signature of the old-growth forest, the forest that used to be,” she writes (281-82). Dolp, a professor of economics in Oregon, came to live at Shotpouch Creek after his marriage ended (282). The conifers were gone, but alders and maples were growing, trying to keep the land from slumping into the creek (282). A clear-cut changes the land (283). “Forest ecosystems have tools for dealing with massive disturbance, evolved from a history of blowdown, landslide, and fire,” Kimmerer writes (283). Pioneer species grow quickly—mostly plants that produce berries—producing “a community based on the principles of unlimited growth, sprawl, and high energy consumption, sucking up resources as fast as they can, wresting land from others through competition, and then moving on” (284). When those resources run short, “cooperation and strategies that promote stability—strategies perfected by rainforest ecosystems—will be favored by evolution” (284). Kimmerer compares salmonberry thickets to industrial forestry, resource extraction, and other aspects of human sprawl, which swallow up the land, reduce biodiversity, and simply ecosystems “at the demand of societies always bent on having more. In five hundred years we exterminated old-growth cultures and old-growth ecosystems, replacing them with opportunistic culture” (284).

In comparison, “[t]he old-growth forest is as stunning in its elegance of function as in its beauty. Under conditions of scarcity, there can be no frenzy of uncontrolled growth or waste of resources” (284). Old-growth forests are models of efficiency, optimizing the capture of solar energy (284). “If we are looking for models of self-sustaining communities, we need look no further than an old-growth forest,” Kimmerer continues. “Or the old-growth cultures they raised in symbiosis with them” (284). Here, Kimmerer returns to Dolp and his desire to live in a sustainable way (285). Dolp wanted to return the land to forest, and he encountered bureaucratic obstacles, since it was designated as timberland, not forest (286). He learned how to replant a forest by observing the forest, by becoming its student (286). “Over time, Franz became a very good ecologist, reading his way through both the printed library and the more subtle library of texts offered by the forest itself,” Kimmerer tells us. “His goal was to match his vision for an ancient forest with the possibilities that the land provided” (287). He planted cedar along the creeks (287). He named places at Shotpouch, even individual trees, remnants of the original forest (288). Beaver ate his creekside plantings of cedar (289). He began watching the watershed heal from the damage it has suffered (290). He created the Spring Creek Project, bringing together artists and ecologists at his cabin (291). But, sadly, he died in a collision with a paper mill truck in 2004 (291).The young cedars he planted invite the rest of us “to be part of the dance of regeneration. Clumsy at first, from generations of sitting on the sidelines, we stumble until we find the rhythm” (292). “Here in a homemade forest, poets, writers, scientists, foresters, shovels, seeds, elk, and alder join in the circle with Mother Cedar, dancing the old-growth children into being,” Kimmerer concludes. “We’re all invited. Pick up a shovel and join the dance” (292).

The following chapter, “Witness to the Rain,” sees Kimmerer still on the Oregon coast. (She must have been a visiting professor there at some point.) Most places she knows, “water is a discrete entity,” “hemmed in by well-defined boundaries,” but in the rain forest (those edges seem to blur, with rain to fine and constant as to be indistinguishable from air and ceders wrapped with cloud so dense that only their outlines emerge” (293-94). Nor does the river, Lookout Creek, “respect clear boundaries”: it flows beneath the bed of the river into the forest, “[a] deep invisible river, known to roots and rocks, the water and the land intimate beyond our knowing” (294). This is the “hypothetic flow,” and it’s what Kimmerer is listening for (294). She stands in the rain, wondering whether all of the drops that fall on the moss are the same size, if “the high humidity around moss makes the drops last longer” (294). She is soaked, after hours in the rain, but, she writes, “I don’t want to just be a bystander to rain, passive and protected; I want to be part of the downpour, to be soaked, along with the dark humus that squishes underfoot” (295). “I want to feel what the cedars feel and know what they know,” she tells us, but unlike the cedars, she is warm-blooded and looks to creatures like her, who require places of refuge, but she can’t find any shelter until she crawls under a giant fallen log (295). That log could fall on her, she notes, but she feels safe in the moment: “The pace of my resting and the pace of its falling run on different clocks” (296).

“Time as an objective reality has never made much sense to me,” Kimmerer writes. “It’s what happens that matters. How can minutes and years, devices of our own creation, mean the same thing to gnats and to cedars?” (296). “If there is meaning in the past and in the imagined future, it is captured in the moment,” she continues (296). She examines the nearby moss on which rain is falling, a “threadlike tip” of a leaf “animated in a most unplantlike fashion,” in which she sees grace, “an animal made of green light and water, a mere thread of a being who like me has gone walking in the rain” (296-97). 

Down by the river, she ponders the differences between rainwater and the river, which are so different and yet kin (297). She tests a hypothesis about the size of raindrops using lichen that has fallen from an alder (297). One she puts in a water containing tannins from an alder leaf, and the other in rainwater: the drops that form from each are different sizes (298). “One thing I’ve learned in the woods is that there is no such thing as random,” she suggests. “Everything is steeped in meaning, colored by relationships, one thing with another” (298).

Beside the river is a flooded meadow (298). “It is a different river in August than in October,” Kimmerer writes. “You’d have to stand here a long time to know them both” (298). We might not be able to know the river, but perhaps we could know the raindrops (298). Different plants shed the rainwater differently (299). She tries to register the different sounds phonetically (299). “Maybe there is no such thing as rain; there are only raindrops, each with its own story,” she states (299).

Then Kimmerer sees her face reflected in a dangling drop of water (300). “The fish-eye lens gives me a giant forehead and tiny ears,” she concludes. “I suppose that’s the way we humans are, thinking too much and listening too little. Paying attention acknowledges that we have something to learn from intelligences other than our own. Listening, standing witness, creates an openness to the world in which the boundaries between us can dissolve in a raindrop. The drop swells on the tip of a cedar and I catch it on my tongue like a blessing” (300). This moment might be one that could be critiqued as romantic, given its echoes of the Eucharist and its perhaps rather easy effacement of the differences between the observer and the observed.

The next chapter, “Windigo Footprints,” is the first in the book’s final section, “Burning Sweetgrass.” I may have read this one before, while writing a paper on the cannibal monster who is the subject of some Cree narratives, but I took no notes and only remember the suggestion that settler society acts like that creature. It’s set in winter, appropriately, since those cannibal stories are late-winter stories, in a season of hunger for the creatures that are not asleep (303). “It is on nights like this that the Windigo is afoot,” Kimmerer writes. “You can hear its unearthly shrieks as it hunts through the blizzard” (303). She explains:

The Windigo is the legendary monster of our Anishinaabe people, the villain of a tale told on freezing nights in the north woods. You can feel it lurking behind you, a being in the shape of an outsized man, ten feet tall, with frost-white hair hanging from its shaking body. With arms like tree trunks, feet as big as snowshoes, it travels easily through the blizzards of the hungry time, stalking us. The hideous stench of its carrion breath poisons the clean scent of snow as it pants behind us. Yellow fangs hang from its mouth that is raw where it has chewed off its lips from hunger. Most telling of all, its heart is made of ice. (304)

I’ve also heard that, along with its lips, this being has chewed off its own fingertips as well. “The Windigo is a human being who has become a cannibal monster,” Kimmerer continues. “Its bite will transform victims into cannibals too” (304).

“Starvation in winter was a reality for our people, particularly in the era of the Little Ice Age when winters were especially hard and long,” she tells us. “Some scholars suggest that Windigo mythology also spread quickly in the time of the fur trade, when overexploitation of game brought famine to the villages. The ever-present fear of winter famine is embodied in the icy hunger and gaping maw of the Windigo” (304). The stories “reinforced the taboo against cannibalism, when the madness of hunger and isolation rustled at the edge of winter lodges” (304). “The more a Windigo eats, the more revenous it becomes,” she continues. “It shrieks with its craving, its mind a torture of unmet want. Consumed by consumption, it lays waste to humankind” (305). The stories about this creature display “the collective fears and deepest values of a people” by presenting a thing “which cares more for its own survival than for anything else” (305).

This being “is a case study of a positive feedback loop, in which a change in one entity promotes a similar change in another, connected part of the system” (305). Thus, its hunger makes it eat, which feeds its hunger ever more “in an eventual frenzy of uncontrolled consumption” (305). However, “[s]table, balanced systems are typified by negative feedback loops, in which a change in one component incites an opposite change in another, so they balance each other out” (305). Thus, eating produces satiety, a decrease in hunger (305). “Negative feedback is a form of reciprocity, a coupling of forces that create balance and sustainability,” she notes (305). “Windigo stories sought to encourage negative feedback loops in the minds of listeners,” she continues, by building “resistance against the insidious germ of taking too much. The old teachings recognized that Windigo nature is in each of us, so the monster was created in stories, that we might learn why we should recoil from the greedy part of ourselves” (305-06). Those stories encourage people to “[s]ee the dark, recognize its power,” but to refrain from feeding it” (306). Ojibwe scholar Basil Johnston and others “point to the current epidemic of self-destructive practices—addiction to alcohol, drugs, gambling, technology, and more—as a sign that Windigo is alive and well” (306). But, more importantly, as Johnston tells us, “multinational corporations have spawned a new breed of Windigo that insatiably devours the earth’s resources” (306). Our addiction to economic growth is probably a sign of that creatures ascendancy in our thinking and in our behaviour.

Kimmerer recalls a brief visit to oilfields in the Ecuadorian Amazon, the ugliness of the town, the potential violence of the drug traffickers, “the snarling town ringed with rainbow-colored lagoons of petrochemical waste, too many to count. The footprints of the Windigo” (307). She sees those footprints everywhere: in polluted lakes, clear cuts, open-pit mining, oil spills, industrial agriculture, “[a] closet stuffed with clothes” (307). “Windigo footprints all, they are the tracks of insatiable consumption,” she writes. “You can see them walking the malls, eyeing your farm for a housing development, running for Congress” (307). By allowing the market to define what we value, we are all complicit, because we have redefined the “common good” so that it depends “on profligate lifestyles that enrich the sellers while impoverishing the soul and the earth” (307).

Cautionary tales, like those about the cannibal spirit, “arose in a commons-based society where sharing was essential to survival and greed made any individual a danger to the whole” (307). Then, those greedy people would be counseled, then ostracized if their behaviour didn’t change, and finally banished, “doomed to wander hungry and alone, wreaking vengeance on the ones who spurned them” (307). “It is a terrible punishment to be banished from the web of reciprocity, with no one to share with you and no one for you to care for,” she writes (307). “Maybe we’ve all been banished to lonely corners by our obsession with private property,” she continues. “We’ve accepted banishment even from ourselves when we spend our beautiful, utterly singular lives on making more money, to buy more things that feed but never satisfy. It is the Windigo way that tricks us into believing that belongings will fill our hunger, when it is belonging that we crave” (308). She fears the ascendancy of that way of thinking and acting: “We have unleashed a monster” (308). 

“Ecological economists argue for reforms that would ground economics in ecological principles and the constraints of thermodynamics,” she concludes, noting that “we must sustain natural capital and ecosystem services if we are to maintain quality of life” (308). However, our “governments still cling to the neoclassical fallacy that human consumption has no consequences. We continue to embrace economic systems that prescribe infinite growth on a finite planet, as if somehow the universe had repealed the laws of thermodynamics on our behalf” (308). “Our leaders wilfully ignore the wisdom and the models of every other species on the planet—except of course those that have gone extinct,” she writes. “Windigo thinking” (309).

The next chapter, “The Sacred and the Superfund,” begins with rain in upstate New york, “the ancestral homelands of the Onondaga people, the central fire of the Iroquois, or Haudenosaunee, Confederacy” (310). “Traditional Onondaga understand a world in which all beings were given a gift, a gift that simultaneously engenders a responsibility to the world,” Kimmerer writes. “Water’s gift is its role as life sustainer, and its duties are manifold: making plants grow, creating homes for fish and mayflies, and, for me today, offering a cool drink” (310). The water she drinks is sweet because it comes from springs that flow through limestone, while others are salty and were used by the Onondaga to season corn soup and preserve fish (310). Water is mentioned in the Thanksgiving address, which also outlines the responsibilities of people—“to give thanks for the gifts of the earth and to care for them” (311).

The Haudenosaunee have stories about a time when they forgot to live in gratitude: “They became greedy and jealous and began fighting among themselves. Conflict brought only more conflict, until war between the nations became continuous. Soon grief was known in every longhouse and yet the violence went on. All were suffering” (311). That is when the Peacemaker, a young Huron man, came to the Haudenosaunee. “Few heeded him at first, but those who listened were transformed,” Kimmerer writes (311). For years the Peacemaker and his allies “travelled between villages and one by one the chiefs of the warring nations came to accept the message of peace, all but one. Tadodaho, an Onondaga leader, refused the way of peace for his people. He was so filled with hate that his hair writhed with snakes and his body was crippled by vitriol” (311-12). However, when he accepted the message of peace, his “twisted body was restored to health and together the messengers of peace combed the snakes from his hair. He too was transformed” (312). The Peacemaker gathered the leaders of the five Haudenosaunee nations beneath the Great Tree of Peace “and joined them with one mind”; that tree came to represent “the unity of the Five Nations” (312). The Peacemaker “lifted the great tree from the soil and the assembled chiefs stepped forward to cast their weapons of war into the hole,” and the nations agreed to “live by the Great Law of Peace, which sets out right relations among peoples and with the natural world. Four white roots spread out to the four directions, inviting all peace-loving nations to shelter under the tree’s branches” (312). “So was born the great Haudenosaunee Confederacy, the oldest living democracy on the planet,” on the shores of Onondaga Lake (312). Today, however, after another stranger, and a different kind of violence, came to the land, “the ground where the Peacemaker walked is a Superfund site” (312).

There are nine Superfund sites around Onondaga Lake, around which Syracuse, New York, has grown (312). More than a century of industrial development has left the lake one of the most polluted in the United States (313). “It is as if the newcomers to Onondaga Lake had declared war, not on each other, but with the land,” Kimmerer writes (313). Beds of industrial waste have filled in the shoreline; that waste is known as Solvay waste, “after the Solvay Process Company that left it behind” (313). “The Solvay Process was a chemical breakthrough that allowed for the production of soda ash, an essential component of other industrial processes such as glass manufacturing and making detergents, pulp, and paper,” Kimmerer explains. “Native limestone was melted in coke-fired furnaces and then reacted with salt to produce soda ash. This industry fueled the growth of the whole region, and chemical processing expanded to include organic chemicals, dyes, and chlorine gas. Train lines ran steadily past the factories, shipping out tons of produces. Pipes ran in the other direction, pouring out tons of waste” (313). Those hills of waste “are the topographic inverse of the open pit minds—the largest open pit mines in New York State, still unreclaimed—where the limestone rocks were quarried, the earth gouged out in one place to bury the ground in another” (314).

Kimmerer imagines the first drops of waste coming out of the pipes at the lake (314). “Did the frogs and mink get away in time to avoid being entombed?” she asks. “What about the turtles? Too slow—they wouldn’t be able to escape being embedded at the bottom of the pile in a perversion of the story of the world’s creation, when the earth was carried on Turtle’s back” (314). The lake’s blue water became white paste; then the pipe was moved to the surrounding wetlands (314). By the time rainwater leaches through the heap of waste, it is “as salty as soup and corrosive as lye. Its beautiful name, water, is lost. It is now called leachate” (314). Leachate burns skin. Engineers now “collect the leachate and mix it with hydrochloric acid in order to neutralize the pH” before releasing it back into the lake” (315). Here, Kimmerer’s personification of the water as innocent could lead to charges of romanticism, but it’s hard not to sympathize with her account of how industrial pollution has turned the water into poison.

The shore of Onondaga Lake is lined with cliffs of Solvay waste (315). Oncolite, “accretions of calcium carbonate . . . pepper the lake bottom” like “tumorous rocks” (315). Rusting pipes stick out of the waste at odd intervals (315). Crystal sheets of salt cover the water (315). “Before the Allied Chemical Company, successor to Solvay Process, ceased operation, the salinity of Onondaga Lake was ten times the salinity of the headwaters of Nine Mile Creek,” Kimmerer tells us (315-16). Aquatic plants can’t grow in the water, and the lake is thus oxygen-poor, and the whole food chain is left without a home (316). Meanwhile, the lake has been fertilized with nitrogen and phosphorous from municipal sewage, which fuels algae blooms which die off and rob the oxygen that is left in the water as they decay (316). The lake smells like the dead fish that wash up on shore on hot summer days (316). 

Fishing in Onondaga Lake has been banned since 1970 because the fish contain high concentrations of mercury, dumped in the lake by Allied Chemical (316). Kids used to make pocket money collecting mercury from the waste beds, and today the mercury remains trapped in the sediments, from which it circulates in the aquatic food chain (316). “A sampling core drilled into the lake bottom cuts through sludge, trapped layers of discharged gas, oil, and sticky black ooze,” Kimmerer writes. “Analysis of these cores reveals significant concentrations of cadmium, barium, chromium, cobalt, lead, benzene, chlorobenzene, assorted xylenes, pesticides, and PCBs” (316). The whitefish Onondaga Lake was once famous for are gone (317). Swimming in the lake has been banned since 1940 (317). 

The dead lake isn’t clear; instead, its waters are nearly opaque with silt which comes from Onondaga Creek, where the Tully mudboils, “which erupt into the creek like mud volcanoes,” send sediment downstream (317). Those mudboils might be the result of salt mining upstream, a process by which water was pumped into the subterranean salt deposits and the brine piped miles down the valley to the Solvay plant (317). “The brine line was run through the remaining territory of the Onondaga Nation, where breaks in the line ruined the well water,” Kimmerer continues. “Eventually the dissolved salt domes collapsed underground, creating holes through which groundwater pushed with high pressure. The resulting gushers created the mudboils that flow downstream and fill the lake with sediment” (317-18). The creek was once a fishery for Atlantic salmon and a place where children swam; now it is as brown as chocolate milk (318).

“The wounds to these waters are as numberous as the snakes in the Tadodaho’s hair, and they must be named before they can be combed out,” Kimmerer writes (318). She describes the extent of ancestral Onondaga territory, the treaties between the Onondaga and the United States, George Washington’s war of extermination against the Onondaga, the assault on language and culture represented by boarding schools, the banning of longhouse ceremonies of thanksgiving (318). Nevertheless, the Onondaga people “never surrendered their caregiving responsibilities. They have continued the ceremonies that honor the land and their connection to it” (319). However, without title to their lands, they cannot protect them, and so they have watched, powerless, as “[t]he plants, animals, and waters they were bound to protect dwindled away, though the covenant with the land was never broken. . . . The people went on giving thanks to the land, although so much of the land had little reason to be thankful for the people” (319).

“Generations of grief, generations of loss, but also strength—the people did not surrender. They had spirit on their side. They had their traditional teachings. And they also had the law,” Kimmerer writes (319). In 2005, the Onondaga Nation filed a complaint in federal court with the goal of reclaiming title to their homelands, so “that they might once again exercise their care-giving responsibilities” (319). The US Supreme Court ruled that Haudenosaunee lands had been illegally taken (319-20). The Onondaga have said they will not try to evict people from their homes—they know the pain of displacement too well to inflict it on others—and their suit begins with a reference to the Gayanashagowa, the Great Law of Peace (320). The defendants include the state of New York and corporations responsible for the pollution, including Honeywell, which is being held accountable for the cleanup of the lake, although no one is quite sure about the best approach for dealing with the contaminated sediments (321). Honeywell’s proposed cleanup plan is minimal and leaves much of the toxins in place to continue to circulate in the ecosystem (321). However, the Onondaga Nation land rights action “stipulated a full cleanup as part of restitution; no halfway measures would be accepted” (322). In 2010, however, the federal court dismissed the Onondaga Nation’s case (322).

Kimmerer recalls her experience as a student in Syracuse, and as a teacher there (322-23). One day, she visited the sediments, behind the fairground (323). Surrounded by reeds, she saw a cottonwood  tree surrounded by life-sized figures posed as if they had been murdered. It was the site of the Solvay Lions Club’s “Haunted Hayrides” (324-25). “The Solvay waste beds: how very fitting a venue for our fears,” she writes. “What we ought to be afraid of isn’t in the haunts, but under them”—the toxins trickling into the lake (325). Even more frightening “is the mind-set that allowed it to happen, that thought it was okay to fill a lake with toxic stew. . . . Human beings made this happen, not a faceless corporation. There were no threats, no extenuating circumstances to force their hands, just business as usual. And the people of the city allowed it to happen” (325). She ponders the etymology of the term “waste beds,” “[r]uined land” that “was accepted as the collateral damage of progress” (326). 

“The waste beds are not unique,” she continues. “The cause and the chemistry vary from my homeland to yours, but each of us can name these wounded places. We hold them in our minds and our hearts. The question is, what do we do in response?” (327). “We could take the path of fear and despair,” documenting all of the destruction, creating a vision of woe and despair (327). She cites philosopher Joanna Macy’s suggestion that “until we can grieve for our planet we cannot love it—grieving is a sign of spiritual health” (327). But grief is not enough: the land also gives us joy and we must return that gift, through action (327). “The participatory role of people in the well-being of the land has been lost, our reciprocal relations reduced to a KEEP OUT sign,” she writes (327). “Despair is paralysis,” she continues. “It robs us of agency. It blinds us to our own power and the power of the earth. Environmental despair is a poison every bit as destructive as the methylated mercury in the bottom of Onondaga Lake” (328).

Kimmerer suggests that restoration “is a powerful anecdote to despair” which “offers concrete means by which humans can once again enter into positive, creative relationship with the more-than-human world, meeting responsibilities that are simultaneously material and spiritual” (328). We have to clean up our mess (328). But restoration means different things depending on what we think the land is: “If land is just real estate, then restoration looks very different than if land is the source of a subsistence economy and a spiritual home. Restoring for production of natural resources is not the same as renewal of land as cultural identity” (328). Such questions “are played out on the Solvay waste beds” (328). The remediation efforts to date have come out of a notion of land as property, of covering the damaged land with invasive phragmites (329). But better ideas exist: “new laws and policy demanded evolution in the concept of restoration: restored sites would have to not only look like nature, but have functional integrity as well” (330). In this model, plants are used “as an engineering solution to water pollution”; shrub willows are used to collect the salts, alkali, and other compounds, and they are then mown down and used as feedstock for biomass fuel digesters (330-31). But that mechanistic fix doesn’t go far enough. “What if we took the indigenous worldview?” Kimmerer asks. “The ecosystem is not a machine, but a community of sovereign beings, subjects rather than objects. What if those beings were the drivers?” (331).

She describes the oldest section of the waste beds, where nature and time are acting to restore the land: “Here on the waste beds there are expanses without a living thing, but there are also teachers of healing and their names are Birch and Alder, Aster and Plantain, Cattail, Moss, and Switchgrass. On the most barren, ground, on the wounds we have inflicted, the plants have not turned their backs on us; instead, they have come” (331-32). The struggling plants she sees are “a form of peacemaking. Plants are the first restoration ecologists. They are using their gifts for healing the land, showing us the way” (332). The waste is changing, being turned into humus (332). Ants have returned, along with birds and deer and insects: “And so the world is made” (332). Under a few pioneering birch trees, fruit shrubs are growing, feeding the birds, which drop their seeds everywhere (332-33). “The beds are greening over. The land knows what to do when we do not,” Kimmerer writes (333). She hopes the waste beds don’t completely disappear, though; we need a reminder of the destruction we are capable of causing (333). “We have an opportunity to learn from them, to understand ourselves as students of nature, not the masters,” she writes (333). 

And yet, the part of the restoration work we have to do is not complete: “As factories have closed and citizens of the watershed build better sewage treatment plants, the waters have responded to that care. The natural resilience of the lake is making its presence known in the tiny increments of dissolved oxygen and returning fish” (333). Hydrogeologists have redirected the output of the mudboils so that the sediment load of Onondaga Creek has been lightened (333). Trout are once again living in the lake, and eagles have nested on the north shore (334). “The waters have not forgotten their responsibility,” she continues. “The waters are reminding the people that they can use their healing gifts when we will use ours” (334). 

However, the plants that are returning are not a native ecosystem (334). “It is unlikely to lead to a plant community that the Onondaga Nation would recognize from their ancestral past,” Kimmerer writes. “Given the drastic changes produced by industrial contamination, it is probably not possible to recreate cedar swamps and beds of wild rice without some help. We can trust the plants to do their work, but except for windblown volunteers, new species can’t get here across highways and acres of industry” (334). People are working to restore the native plants that survived in the lake’s salt marshes (335). Kimmerer suggests that work is a sign of an acceptance of the land as responsibility (335). She suggests that the people engaged in that restoration work love the land, although they cannot admit it in scientific discourse (335). Sweetgrass is growing beside Onondaga Lake now (335): “She reminded me that it is not the land that has been broken, but our relationship with it” (336).

“Restoration is imperative for healing the earth, but reciprocity is imperative for long-lasting, successful restoration,” Kimmerer writes. “Like other mindful practices, ecological restoration can be viewed as an act of reciprocity in which humans exercise their caregiving responsibility for the ecosystems that sustain them. We restore the land, and the land restores us” (336). Although we might not be able to be restore the Onondaga watershed to its preindustrial condition, the earth itself “will restore the structure and function, the ecosystem services” (336). “What if we could fashion a restoration plan that grew from understanding multiple meanings of land?” Kimmerer asks. “Land as sustainer. Land as identity. Land as grocery store and pharmacy. Land as connection to ancestors. Land as moral obligation. Land as sacred. Land as self” (337). 

The plants growing on the waste beds remind Kimmerer of her neighbours at Onondaga Nation: “faced with daunting odds, great hostility, and an environment much changed from the rich land that first sustained them,” the Onondaga people have survived and continued to meet their responsibilities (337-38). They have issued the “Onondaga Nation Vision for a Clean Onondaga Lake,” which “follows the ancient teachings of the Thanksgiving Address” (338). “It is an exemplar of a new holistic approach, called biocultural or reciprocal restoration,” Kimmerer notes (338). It sees the land as a community of non-human persons to which we have a responsibility (338). Renewal of relationships means being able to swim in the water and eat the fish (338). “Biocultural restoration raises the bar for environmental quality of the reference ecosystem, so that as we care for the land, it can once again care for us,” she continues. “Restoring land without restoring relationship is an empty exercise. It is relationship that will endure and relationship that will sustain the restored land. Therefore, reconnecting people and the landscape is as essential as reestablishing proper hydrology or cleaning up contaminants. It is medicine for the earth” (338).

Kimmerer describes the beginning of a restoration project on the western shore of Onondaga Lake, one that saw the land as sacred and as community (338-39). Such restoration projects, even if they are small and fragile, are inspiring: “Your hands itch to pull out invasive species and replant the native flowers. Your finger trembles with a wish to detonate the explosion of an obsolete dam that would restore a salmon run. These are antidotes to the poison of despair” (339). She cites Joanna Macy’s notion of the Great Turning, from a society based on industrial growth to one based on sustaining life, and suggests that restoring land and relationship “pushes that turning wheel” (339-40). She concludes by imagining what the land could look like, an idyllic (even utopian) scene she describes as “LAND AS HOME” (340).

The next chapter, “People of Corn, People of Light,” begins: “The story of our relationship to the earth is written more truthfully on the land than on the page. It lasts there. The land remembers what we said and what we did” (341). “Stories are among our most potent tools for restoring the land as well as our relationship to land,” Kimmerer continues. “We need to unearth the old stories that live in a place and begin to create new ones, for we are storymakers, not just storytellers” (341). All stories are connected—each is woven from threads of older stories (341). Kimmerer tells the Mayan story of the creation of humans: unsatisfactory people made of mud, people made from wood who filled the world but whose hearts were empty of compassion and love and who expressed no gratitude for the gifts they had received, people made of light who believed themselves to be the gods’ equals, people made from corn who were grateful (341-43). The people of corn were grateful because they were beings transformed by relationship (343). Corn owes its existence to all four elements; it is light transformed by relationship; it is in relationship with people, because it needs us to sow it and tend its growth (343). “From these reciprocal acts of creation arise the elements that were missing from the other attempts to create sustainable humanity: gratitude, and a capacity for reciprocity,” Kimmerer states (343).

She considers that story of creation to reflect an ongoing process: are we yet people of corn? Might we be made of wood? Are we made of light, “in thrall to our own power”? Have we been transformed by relationship to earth (343)? She thinks Indigenous stories are important, but does not advocate their appropriation by settlers (344). Instead, “an immigrant culture must write its own new stories of relationship to place,” stories “tempered by the wisdom of those who were old on this land long before we came” (344). (The pronoun “we” is curious here.) But how can that happen? She considers the chemistry of corn’s photosynthesis to be “a beautiful poem, and the chemistry of respiration another, and the reciprocity they suggest together to be a story worth telling: “Only when people understand the symbiotic relationships that sustain them can they become people of corn, capable of gratitude and reciprocity” (344-45).

“The very facts of the world are a poem,” Kimmerer continues:

Light is turned to sugar. Salamanders find their way to ancestral ponds following magnetic lines radiating from the earth. The saliva of grazing buffalo causes the grass to grow taller. Tobacco seeds germinate when they smell smoke. Microbes in industrial waste can destroy mercury. Aren’t these stories we all should know? (545)

But scientists are poor storytellers and communicate in abstruse, difficult language, and “the scientific worldview is all too often an enemy of ecological compassion,” because its practice feeds a scientific worldview that reinforces “reductionist, materialist economic and political agendas” (345-46). “I maintain that the destructive lens of the people made of wood is not science itself, but the lens of the scientific worldview, the illusion of dominance and control, the separation of knowledge from responsibility,” she writes. “I dream of a world guided by a lens of stories rooted in the revelations of science and framed with an indigenous worldview—stories in which matter and spirit are both given voice” (346). 

Moreover, scientists lack humility, believing that theirs is the only form of intelligence. But, in the Indigenous worldview, “humans are viewed as somewhat lesser beings in the democracy of species. We are referred to as the younger brothers of Creation, so like younger brothers we must learn from our elders” (346). So, what would happen if Western scientists “saw plants as their teachers rather than their subjects? What if they told stories with that lens?” (346-47). What if they thought about our responsibility and our gift (347)? Gratitude and reciprocity are linked (347). If the human gift is language, then writing is “an act of reciprocity with the living land,” Kimmerer concludes. “Words to remember old stories, words to tell new ones, stories that bring science and spirit back together to nurture our becoming people made of corn” (347).

“Collateral Damage,” the following chapter, begins with clearing the spotted salamanders off a road at night (348). It flashes back to preparing for the work while CNN reports that bombs are falling on Baghdad (349). Kimmerer thinks about the phrase “collateral damage,” words which “ask us to turn our faces away, as if man-made destruction were an inescapable fact of nature” (349). It’s raining on this spring night, and as the ice melts, spotted salamanders are waking up (349). Their migration “from winter burrows to the vernal pools where they will meet their mates” is one of the signs of spring (350). They move en masse (350). Their numbers diminish each year; a highway blocks their access to Labrador Pond, their destination: “The pond and surrounding hills are connected as state forest, but the road is a free-for-all” (350). Other creatures—frogs, toads, newts, tree frogs—are also on the move, but Kimmerer and her companions are only there to help the lumbering salamanders: “we stop and pick them up one after the other, carefully setting them on the other side of the road” (350). The females arrive first, heavy with eggs, heading for the pool where they were born (351). They are guided “by a combination of magnetic and chemical signals that herpetologists are just beginning to understand,” in part by the planet’s magnetic field (352).

When the salamanders arrive at the pool where they were born, they disappear into the water (352). The water churns with their mating dance (353). After the eggs are laid, the mother returns to the woods, while her young stay in the pool, “metamorphosing until they are capable of life on land” (353-54). “By the time the pool has dried up and forced them out, their gills will be replaced by lungs and they are ready to forage on their own,” Kimmerer writes (354). Juvenile salamanders, newts, will wander for years until they are sexually mature, when they will return to the pond (354). Salamanders can live as long as 18 years—but only if they make it across that highway (354).

“Amphibians are one of the most vulnerable groups on the planet,” Kimmerer explains. “Subject to habitat loss as wetlands and forests disappear, amphibians are the collateral damage we blindly accept as the cost of development. And because amphibians breathe through their skin, they have little ability to filter out toxins at that moist membrane between animal and atmosphere” (354). 

On this foggy night, Kimmerer compares the carnage on the highway to the broken bodies in Baghdad (355). “They are all collateral damage,” she writes. “If it is oil that sends the sons to war, and oil that fuels the engines that roar down this hollow, then we are all complicit, soldiers, civilians, and salamanders connected in death by our appetite for oil” (355). Okay, but the salamanders are innocent—they have no appetite for oil at all. They are its victims.

More people arrive—helpers, students from a herpetology class at the college (355-56). The highway department could install salamander crossings, “special culverts that allow the animals to avoid the road, but they’re expensive and the authorities need to be convinced of their importance” (356). The students are estimating the number of animals crossing the highway, and the number who die en route (356). Counting the dead is easy; counting the living requires special fences that lead the salamanders to plastic buckets, where they are caught; the students count their numbers and then let them go (356-57). By helping the animals, Kimmerer and her friends have skewed the numbers. Naturalists, she says, paraphrasing Aldo Leopold, “live in a world of wounds that only they can see” (357).

Kimmerer notes that helping the salamanders isn’t altruism; it rewards both the givers and the receivers (358). “We get to be there, to witness this amazing rite, and, for an evening, to enter into relationship with other beings, as different from ourselves as we can imagine,” she writes (358). Unlike the “species loneliness”—the “estrangement from the rest of Creation”—that the rest of us feel, for the salamanders’ helpers, the barriers between species dissolved “and we began to relieve the loneliness and know each other once again” (358). Amphibians are different from us—cold, slimy—and hard for some humans to empathize with: “They bring us face to face with our innate xenophobia, sometimes directed at other species and sometimes directed at our own” (358). However, “[b]eing with salamanders gives honor to otherness, offers an antidote to the poison of xenophobia. Each time we rescue slippery, spotted beings we attest to their right to be, to live in the sovereign territory of their own lives” (358). It also reminds Kimmerer of “the covenant of reciprocity, the mutual responsibility that we have for each other. As the perpetrators of the war zone on this road, are we not bound to heal the wounds that we inflict?” (358-59). Kimmerer can’t stop the war in Iraq, but she can pick up salamanders and carry them across a highway: “What is it that draws us to this lonely hollow? Maybe it is love, the same thing that draws the salamanders from under the logs. Or maybe we walked this road tonight in search of absolution” (359). 

Kimmerer concludes with the sound of frogs, as if they were telling listeners that the strange human desire for ease “should not mean a death sentence for the rest of Creation” (359). When she gets home, she can’t sleep, and walks to the pond behind her house, where the air rings with the calls of frogs and toads. A toad calls “Weep! Weep!” and she does: “If grief can be a doorway to love, then let us all weep for the world we are breaking apart so we can love it back to wholeness again” (359).

The next chapter, “Shkitagen: People of the Seventh Fire,” begins with a description of laying and lighting a fire (360). She recalls how her father taught her to split wood and build fires (360-61). “Woven into my dad’s fire teachings was appreciation for all the woods gave us and a sense of our responsibility for reciprocity,” she writes (361). “Fire building was a vital connection to those who came before,” the Potawatomi, or Bodwewadmi in their own language, which means “People of the Fire” (361). Kimmerer tries to make a fire without matches, using a bow and drill (361-62). She recalls how her father teaches children at Indigenous summer camps that Indigenous peoples used to set small fires “to take care of the land—to help the blueberries grow, or to make meadows for deer” (362). Fire can be a way to give back to the land (363). Here Kimmerer shifts to birch forests and their gifts, which include a fungus the Potawatomi call shkitagen, which is used for tinder. But, “as forests are felled and fire suppression jeopardizes species that depend upon burned ground,” like birches, “it is getting harder and harder to find” (364). 

Kimmerer shifts back to her father teaching children at the camp, discussing the Sacred Fire as a symbol of life and spirit, and the fire each child carries, their spirit, a piece of that sacred fire (364). He tells them that fire has two sides: it is both creative or destructive (365). Both sides must be respected; balance is essential (365). She thinks about a metaphorical use of the word “fire”—to represent eras in the life of the Potawatomi nation, places they have lived and the events and teachings that come from them (365). “Anishinaabe knowledge keepers—our historians and scholars—carry the narrative of the people from our earliest origin, long before the coming of the offshore people, the zaaganaash,” she writes. “They also carry what came before, for our histories are inevitably braided together with our futures. This story is known as the Seventh Fire Prophecy” (365). During the era of the First Fire, Anishinaabe people lived on the Atlantic coast, but a prophecy foretold their destruction if they didn’t move west to a place where food grows on the water (365). They moved inland, near what’s now Montreal, where a new teacher advised them to move farther west; they followed that teaching and settled on Lake Huron in three groups: the Ojibwe, the Odawa, and the Potawatomi (366). The three groups separated, but they reunited at Manitoulin Island and formed the Three Fires Confederacy (366). In the time fo the Third Fire, they established their homelands in the place where wild rice grows (366). 

Then comes the Fourth Fire: the arrival of people from across the sea (366). Two prophets disagreed on what would transpire. One said “that if the offshore people, the zaaganaash, came in brotherhood, they would bring great knowledge. Combined with Anishnaabe ways of knowing, this would form a great new nation” (366). But the other said that these new people might be greedy, hungry for the riches of the land, and that what looked like the face of brotherhood might end up being the face of death (366). “If the fish became poisoned and the water unfit to drink, we would know which face they wore,” that prophet said (366). Because of their behaviour, the zaaganaash came to be known as chimokman—the long-knife people (366-67). The prophecies described what became history during the period of the Fifth Fire, when children were taken from their families and forbidden to speak their languages, when a universe of knowledge disappeared within a generation (367). And the prophecy said that in the time of the Sixth Fire there would be great grief and bitterness, but that something would still remain, that the peoples’ spiritual lives would keep them strong (367). During the time of the Seventh Fire, “a new people would emerge with a sacred purpose,” and they would “retrace the steps of the ones who brought us here,” gathering all the fragments left scattered along the trail: fragments of language, song, stories, sacred teachings (367-67). “Our elders say that we live in the time of the seventh fire,” Kimmerer writes. “We are the ones the ancestors spoke of, the ones who will bend to the task of putting things back together to rekindle the flames of the sacred fire, to begin the rebirth of a nation” (368).

Today, language and culture are being revitalized by people with “the courage to breathe life into old ceremonies, gather speakers to reteach the language, plant old seed varieties, restore native landscapes, bring the youth back to the land” (368). During the time of the Seventh Fire, there will be two paths forward: one grassy, the other burned black (368). If people choose the grassy path, life will be sustained; if they choose the path of cinders and ash, “the damage they have wrought upon the earth will turn against them and bring suffering and death to earth’s people” (368). We do stand at that crossroads, particularly regarding climate change and mass extinctions (368). For Kimmerer, this prophecy is a metaphor she can imagine, and she thinks about people carrying the knowledge they need to change their worldview so they can “find the tools that allow us to walk into the future” (369). The people are not alone—nonhumans also want to help, because they want to live, too—and others, of all skin tones, “who understand the choice ahead, who share a vision of respect and reciprocity, of fellowship with the more-than-human world,” are there too (369). But there are others travelling blindly down the road of cinders, and she worries they will come to the crossroads first and make the choice for everyone (369).

Kimmerer says she has seen that cinder path before, when a natural-gas pipeline exploded less than a mile from their farm and the road had melted into sharp cinders (369-70). “I was a climate refugee for just one night, but it was enough,” she writes, noting that she’s afraid of what is coming, as coastal towns are flooding and coral reefs bleaching and the permafrost is melting (370-71). “These are the fires of the scorched path,” she writes. “Let this not be the seventh fire. I pray we have not already passed the fork in the road” (371).

Everyone needs to carry something, a song, a story, a word, a tool, a ceremony, not for ourselves, but for those who are not yet born (371). “Collectively, we assemble from the wisdom of the past a vision for the future, a worldview shaped by mutual flourishing,” she writes:

Our spiritual leaders interpret this prophecy as the choice between the deadly road of materialism that threatens the land and the people, and the soft path of wisdom, respect, and reciprocity that is held in the teachings of the first fire. It is said that if the people choose the green path, then all races will go forward together to light the eighth and final fire of peace and brotherhood, forging the great nation that was foretold long ago. (371)

We have to gather everything needed—tinder, thoughts, practices—that will nurture that Eighth Fire (371-72).

Here Kimmerer returns to making a fire with a bow and drill, with the shkitagen, the materials the bow and drill and board are made from, and then she turns again to the prophecies (372-73). “As the seventh fire people walk the path, we should also be looking for shkitagen, the ones who hold the spark that cannot be extinguished,” she writes. “We find the firekeepers all along the path and greet them with gratitude and humility that against all odds, they have carried the ember forward, waiting to be breathed into life” (373). “I don’t know how the eighth fire will be lit,” she concludes. “But I do know we can gather the tinder what will nurture the flame, that we can be shkitagen to carry the fire, as it was carried to us. Is this not a holy thing, the kindling of this fire? So much depends on the spark” (373).

The book’s last chapter—except for the epilogue—is “Defeating Windigo.” It begins with a walk through the woods in spring and the discovery that her neighbour has cut down the forest, a dishonorable way to harvest (374). The invasive species that follow Windigo footprints—garlic mustard and buckthorn—will replace the trillium, bloodroot, hepatica, bellwort, trout lily, wild ginger, and wild leeks that, without the trees, will not survive the summer (374). Kimmerer fears that a world made of gifts cannot coexist with a world made of commodities, and she fears that she cannot protect what she loves against the Windigo (374). I’m reminded of the friendly farmer I met the other day who is expanding her organic farm quickly, by ploughing under native grassland; that way she won’t have to wait for the chemicals used by other farmers to dissipate. But that grassland is priceless. What world have we created, where to grow organically means destroying indigenous prairie? No doubt she can’t afford to let fields sit idle while the herbicides and pesticides and chemical fertilizers slowly disappear. And perhaps Kimmerer’s neighbour needed the money the maple forest brought in—to pay medical bills, to fund a retirement. But it’s still a destruction of the ecosystem we depend on, in ways we cannot see because we cannot measure it.

“Given the rampant destruction wrought by our contemporary Windigo-mind,” Kimmerer continues, “I wondered if our ancient stories contained some wisdom that might guide us today” (375). Some suggest that climate change will melt the cannibal monster’s icy heart, but before it dies, it will take much of what Kimmerer loves with it: “We can wait for climate change to turn the world and the Windigo into a puddle of red-tinged meltwater, or we can strap on our snowshoes and track him down” (375). She recalls a story of Nanabozho leading warriors against a cannibal monster in summer, when his power is weak, because summer is niibin—the time of plenty (375). “Here is the arrow that weakens the monster of overconsumption, a medicine that heals the sickness: its name is plenty,” she writes. “In winter, when scarcity is at its zenith, the Windigo rages beyond control, but when abundance reigns the hunger fades away and with it the power of the monster” (376). She cites the work of anthropologist Marshall Sahlins, who argues that capitalist societies require artificial scarcity to function, giving nothing to some and “diseases of excess” to others (376). “An economy that grants personhood to corporations but denies it to more-than-human beings: this is a Windigo economy,” she writes (376).

The alternative may be contained within the “One Bowl and One Spoon” teaching, “which holds that the girts of the earth are all in one bowl, all to be shared from a single spoon. This is the vision of the economy of the commons, wherein resources fundamental to our well-being, like water and land and forests, are commonly held rather than commodified” (376). Managed correctly, the commons maintains abundance instead of scarcity (376). “These contemporary economic alternatives strongly echo the indigenous worldview in which the earth exists not as private property, but as a commons, to be tended with respect and reciprocity for the benefit of all,” Kimmerer states (376).

But changes in policy need to be accompanied by changes to the heart: “Scarcity and plenty are as much qualities of the mind and spirit as they are of the economy. Gratitude plants the seed for abundance” (376). We need to reclaim

our membership in the cultures of gratitude that formed our old relationships with the living earth. Gratitude is a powerful antidote to Windigo psychosis. A deep awareness of the gifts of the earth and of each other is medicine. The practice of gratitude lets us hear the badgering of marketers as the stomach grumblings of a Windigo. It celebrates cultures of regenerative reciprocity, where wealth is understood to be having enough to share and riches are counted in mutually beneficial relationships. Besides, it makes us happy. (377)

Gratitude for what the earth has given us gives us the courage to face the cannibal spirit that stalks us, “to refuse to participate in an economy that destroys the beloved earth to line the pockets of the greedy, to demand an economy that is aligned with life, not stacked against it” (377). And here, Kimmerer anticipates my objection: “It’s easy to write that, harder to do” (377).

The chapter ends with a story about feeding buckthorn berries to a cannibal monster (377). Buckthorn “is a rampant invader of disturbed species” and poisons the soil, “creating a floristic desert” (377-78). It is “a winner in the free market, a success story built on efficiency, monopoly, and the creation of scarcity. It is a botanical imperialist, stealing land from the native species” (378). It’s also taking over our yard. She imagines making a syrup of blackthorn berries, adding other plants, turning it into a tea (378). The cannibal monster arrives; she gives it buckthorn tea (379). He drinks it and howls for more (379). He vomits and shits himself—because the berries contain a laxative, and a whole kettle is an emetic—throwing up “coins and coal slurry, clumps of sawdust from my woods, clots of tar sand, and the little bones of birds,” “Solvay waste,” “an entire oil slick,” until his stomach is empty and all that comes up “is the thin liquid of loneliness” (379). The monster is now a carcass, but his hunger remains; she feeds it medicine: “tea of Willow to quell the fever of want and Strawberries to mend the heart. With the nourishing broth of the Three Sisters and infued with savory Wild Leeks, the medicines enter his bloodstream: White Pine for unity, justice from Pecans, the humility of Spruce roots,” “the compassion of Witch Hazel, the respect of Cedars, a blessing of Silverbells, all sweetened with the Maple of gratitude” (379). “You can’t know reciprocity until you know the gift,” she writes. “He is helpless before their power” (379). And she gives him one final gift, the story of Skywoman (379). That story is unlike the Cree narratives I’ve read about that monster, but it’s forgiving and kind and suggests that, despite her anxiety about cultural appropriation, the way for the cannibal spirit to become human is through Indigenous knowledge.

Finally, the book ends with “Epilogue: Returning the Gift.” Kimmerer is picking raspberries (380). She counts the gifts that are being given in ceremony (380). Then there is a dance (380). “This is our traditional giveaway, the minidewak, an old ceremony well loved by our people and a frequent feature of powwows,” she writes. “In the outside world, people who are celebrating life events can look forward to receiving presents in their honor. In the Potawatomi way, this expectation is turned upside down. It is the honored one who gives the gifts, who piles the blanket high to share good fortune with everyone in the circle” (381). Gifts are often handmade, and an entire community might work all year long to make presents for gifts they don’t know; at large intertribal gatherings, the gifts might be from Walmart (381). “No matter what the gift is, a black ash basket or a pot holder, the sentiment is the same,” she continues. “The ceremonial giveaway is an echo of our oldest teachings” (381). 

This ceremony is about generosity, “a moral and a material imperative, especially among people who live close to the land and know its waves of plenty and scarcity” (381). Hoarding gifts leads to a kind of constipation, and hoarders become “too heavy to join the dance,” the way those who take too much will sit beside their things, guarding them, instead of dancing (381). However, in a culture of gratitude, “everyone knows that gifts will follow the circle of reciprocity and flow back to you again. This time you give and next time you receive. Both the honor of giving and the humility of receiving are necessary halves of the equation” (381). Gifts are to be taken care of: that’s what gifts ask of you (382).

Kimmerer wonders if this ceremony comes from the behaviour of berry plants (382). “The berries are always present at our ceremonies,” she writes. “They join us in a wooden bowl. One big bowl and one big spoon, which are passed around the circle, so that each person can taste the sweetness, remember the gifts, and say thank you” (382). The gifts of the earth are to be shared, but they aren’t limitless, and when there’s one spoon, it’s the same size for everyone (382). Berries show that gratitude isn’t enough to refill the empty bowl: “The berries trust that we will uphold our end of the bargain and disperse their seeds to new places to grow, which is good for berries and for boys. They reminds us that all flourishing is mutual. We need the berries and the berries need us. Their gifts multiply by our care for them, and dwindle from our neglect” (382). But people have abandoned those berry teachings, and act “[a]s if the earth were not a bowl of berries, but an open pit mine, and the spoon a gouging shovel” (383). We act like burglars, breaking into the earth to take fossil fuels, instead of receiving the gifts of wind and sun and water (383). 

“We are all bound by a covenant of reciprocity: plant breath for animal breath, winter and summer, predator and prey, grass and fire, night and day, living and dying,” Kimmerer continues. “Water knows this, clouds know this. Soil and rocks know they are dancing in a continuous giveaway of making, unmaking, and making again the earth” (383). Elders say that ceremony is the way we can remember this fact: “In the dance of the giveaway, remember that the earth is a gift that we must pass on, just as it came to us. When we forget, the dances we’ll need will be for mourning. For the passing of polar bears, the silence of cranes, for the death of rivers and the memory of snow” (383). Kimmerer imagines “people recognizing, for perhaps the first time, the dazzling gifts of the world, seeing them with new eyes, just as they teeter on the cusp of undoing. Maybe just in time. Or maybe too late” (383). She lists the gifts of the earth and wants “to hear a great song of thanks rise on the wind. I think that song might save us” (383). That song, the drums, will lead to a dance celebrating the living earth (383-84).

“The moral covenant of reciprocity calls us to honor all our responsibilities for all we have been given, for all that we have taken,” Kimmerer concludes. “It’s our turn now, long overdue. Let us hold a giveaway for Mother Earth, spread our blankets out for her and pile them high with gifts of our own making”: books, works of art, poems, compassionate acts, ideas, tools (384). “Gifts of mind, hands, heart, voice, and vision all offered up on behalf of the earth,” she states. “Whatever our gift, we are called to give it and to dance for the renewal of the world” (384). We must do this, she says, in her final sentence, “[i]n return for the privilege of breath” (384).

Braiding Sweetgrass is an important book. Its emphasis on gratitude and reciprocity are absolutely important. So too (for my current project, anyway) is its focus on botany. It’s not a short book, and it offers more to think about than I can consider here, in this conclusion. In fact, I’m almost overwhelmed by it. It’s also a model for writing creative nonfiction—particularly the way Kimmerer shifts back and forth between personal narrative and wider contexts. It’s a generous book—to settlers, I mean—and it might be too generous, given the way she describes the society and economy we’ve established as participating in the Windigo spirit. I also wonder whether that spirit can be rehabilitated, as Kimmerer’s story suggests, or whether it must be eliminated, as the Cree narratives I’ve read teach. That story might be too generous to that creature and the the economy it represents, but at the same time, Kimmerer is clearly reaching for something hopeful, something positive, despite everything in our world that calls us to despair. That sense of hope is worth holding onto, even if it doesn’t quite feel real on a day when temperatures in British Columbia are reaching 49 degrees and people are watching for catastrophic forest fires. If this is a foretaste of the future, we are in terrible trouble.

Works Cited

Garneau, David. “Migration as Territory: Performing Domain with a Non-Colonial Aesthetic Attitude.” Voz-à-Voz/Voice-à-Voice, http://www.vozavoz.ca/feature/david-garneau.

Kimmerer, Robin. “Speaking of Nature.” Orion Magazine, 12 June 2017, https://orionmagazine.org/article/speaking-of-nature/. 

Kimmerer, Robin Wall. Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants, Milkweed Editions, 2013.

Levi, Primo. “Carbon.” The Periodic Table, translated by Raymond Rosenthal, Schocken, 1984, pp. 226-36.

Simpson, Leanne Betasamosake. “Land as Pedagogy: Nishnaabeg Intelligence and Rebellious Transformation.” Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society, vol. 3, no. 3, 2014, pp. 1-25. 

Todd, Zoe. “Fish, Kin and Hope: Tending to Water Violations in amiskwaciwâskahikan and Treaty Six Territory.” Afterall, vol. 43, 2017, pp. 102-07.

“We’re Losing Our Wetlands—and That’s a Big Problem.” EcoFriendly Sask, 6 December 2018, https://www.ecofriendlysask.ca/2018/12/were-losing-our-wetlands-and-thats-big.html.

La Paperson, “A Ghetto Land Pedagogy: An Antidote for Settler Environmentalism”

La Paperson begins “A Ghetto Land Pedagogy: An Antidote for Settler Environmentalism” with a road map. First, Paperson says, “I analyze an Urban Ecology lesson as an illustration of how settler environmentalism employs the logic of terra sacer, or sacred/accursed land, to describe ghettos as wastelands ripe for rescue by ecological settlers” (115). Then, Paperson considers the Occupy movement “as settler signifier for social justice, an extension of the settler pursuit of land” (115). After that, the essay considers land in the San Francisco Bay area (115). “In contrast to place as a site of settler belonging and identity, this discussion heeds Goeman’s (2013) call to think through ‘storied land’ as an antidote to settler colonial vanishing,” Paperson writes. “Storied land offers a method of land education, by extending critical cartography’s spatial analysis with a temporal analysis implied by Indigenous struggle and Black resistance: the when of land, not just the where of place” (115). “A ghetto land pedagogy thus attends to an analysis of settler colonialism, offers a critique of settler environmentalism, and forwards a decolonizing cartography as a method for land education,” Paperson writes (115).

The essay’s first section begins with a paragraph discussing urban planner Robert Moses as an epitome of settler colonialism’s evolution, because his highway network “laid waste to Black and working class neighbourhoods” in New York City (116). “Ghetto colonialism is a specialization of settler colonialism in North America,” Paperson writes (116). It “takes place at this intersection between Indigenous displacement and black dislocation” because of the way that settler colonialism (in the United States and other locations where slavery was a central part of the economy) divides people into three groups: white settlers entitled to the land, Indigenous people who must be removed from the land, and black people who are chattel slaves (116). “For settlers seeking new frontiers, the ghetto serves as an interior frontier to be laid waste in order to renew,” Paperson continues. “It is a terra sacer, doubling as sacred and accursed land, a murderable nonplace always available for razing and resettlement” (116). Paperson is drawing on the work of Giorgio Agamben’s discussion of homo sacer here (116). Indigenous land is the exterior frontier of imperialism, and the ghetto is its interior frontier: “the outcast, the alley and the underground” (116). According to Paperson, “[s]ettler colonial eyes see the ghetto as sacred wasteland that may be re-inhabited by anybody, with impunity” (117). This argument would be clearer if Paperson explored the way that land is both sacred and accursed simultaneously, rather than just mentioning Agamben’s use of the Latin term sacer. Sometimes an argument needs to slow down and engage with its audience in a more deliberate fashion.

For Paperson, “[t]erra sacer is a virulent variation of the settler colonial ideology of terra nullius, the colonial fiction of ‘empty land’ or ‘land not legally belonging to anyone. Nullius is the justification for the doctrine of discovery: that one can stab a flag into the earth or a needle into a person’s tissue and claim a colony” (117). The leap from a beach in the Caribbean in 1492 to the appropriation of genetic material without consent is a big one, but perhaps both are aspects of the same phenomenon. Terra nullius “is the founding covenant for settler colonial states” (117)—and it’s the basis of the Crown’s claim to ownership over land in Canada. However, as Paperson notes, land is usually not empty; instead, it must be made empty by declaring its inhabitants uncivilized and thus unworthy of the land they own (117). 

“The duality of land as desecrated, in pain, in need of rescue; and land as sacred, wild, and preserve-able; are contemporary discourses that justify re-invasion,” Paperson contends. “They collapse Native land and black space together, leading once again to re-settlement” (117). Settlers come to see themselves as ecological stewards, worthy of reinhabiting a rehabilitated land (117). “In this ecological dystopia, Indigenous Americans are largely extinct through regrettable genocide, or survive spectrally through the settler’s Indian heart,” Paperson continues. “Terra sacer is a proxy for settler humanity; like the land, settlers view them/ourselves as traumatized yet healable. This is the settler adoption fantasy . . . that they/we can adopt the land and be adopted by the land” (117). I’m not sure how the idea of terra sacer ends up being a projection of the settler’s self, or how it is an adoption fantasy; again, Paperson needs to be a little more methodical in explicating these ideas. Paperson refers to the essay “Decolonization Is Not a Metaphor” here, in which Tuck and Yang disqualify settlers from any relationship to the land beyond exploitation and unjust occupation. That essay one of the most frustrating and hopeless things I’ve read, and to be honest, if Tuck and Yang are right, then there’s no point in my research at all—it is doomed to fail, it is pointless, it is worse than useless. That essay leaves no place for settlers to do anything other than unjustly occupy Indigenous land. Perhaps that’s accurate; perhaps it’s an overstatement.

The “ecological destruction that has accompanied settler colonialism” has been critiqued: “environmental racism,” “‘nature’ as rape-able,” and “‘development’ as the normalized aim of modernity” have all been critiqued (117). However, those critiques “can miss the core of Indigenous relationships to lands and communities, particularly the complex relationships between urban Indigenous land and life, not to mention between Indigenous, Black, and ghettoized communities” (117). In addition, environmentalism “has been largely silent on land, that is, silent on the settler colonial recasting of land into ‘environment,’ and silent on broader Indigenous understandings of land as ancestor, as sovereign, as people-places with their own politics and identities” (117-18). I’m reminded of the ways that the creation of national parks in Canada involved the expulsion of the Indigenous people living in those places, or of recent reports suggesting that biodiversity is higher on lands managed by Indigenous peoples (see Swiderska). 

Here Paperson critiques the teaching of urban ecology at an Oakland high school as an example of “pain curriculum” that sets the stage “for a performance of environmentalist rescue” because it described “the negative consequences of the automobile” (118). I don’t know what to make of that. Does Paperson think the automobile has no negative consequences? Or that students shouldn’t learn about what making the automobile the centre of our transportation infrastructure has done to us or to our planet? The alternatives—public transit and cycling—“worked differently for white cosmopolitans than for ghettoized peoples” in the structure of the lesson, which taught a “metanarrative” within its “cartography of Oakland’s places and peoples”: “Downtown matters. Commuters count” (120). “Indeed, this urban ecology unit invited students to participate in their own disappearance: lend your voice to fixing the ghetto wasteland by paving bikeways and funding rapid commuter lines for the cosmopolitan citizen,” Paperson writes (120). I’m not sure if the critique here is of the lesson, or of public transit’s “metanarrative,” the way perhaps that transit systems tend to be designed on a hub-and-spoke principle that makes movement from one suburb to another difficult without going into the city centre as part of the journey—or if the complaint is that extending public transit to Oakland would enable gentrification that would price local people out of their own community (120). The latter, it seems, since Paperson devotes a paragraph to the effects of extending the transit system from San Francisco to Oakland. Is that an effect of transit, though, or of the outrageous real estate market in the Bay Area?

“Urban educators have few tools for engaging settler colonialism because terra sacer often under-girds environmental education in urban schools,” Paperson continues. “Environmental education offers three limited social justice frameworks: environmental racism—a framework that focuses on pain; green curriculum—a framework that focuses on rescue; and place-based curriculum—a framework that focuses on inclusion, and thus, the replacement of Native land/people with a multicultural immigrant nation” (120). Again, the suggestion that “pain” needs to be avoided baffles me. Students living in a city like Oakland might have direct experience of environmental racism, so why not acknowledge that experience by talking about it? What is the goal of environmental education, according to Paperson? Does “place-based curriculum” always occur at the expense of Indigenous perspectives? According to Paperson, “when strung together, such pedagogies concerning US ghettos contain a settler colonial teleology” (120).

Here Paperson turns to “[p]ain curriculum,” which “highlights, legitimately, the disproportionate toxification of air, soil, and water in poor, urban, communities of color” (120). And not just those communities, either: climate change doesn’t discriminate. In any case, Paperson continues: “reducing ghettos to pain-filled sites of environmental toxicity in need of salvation, echo[es] the settler colonial logics of terra sacer—wasteland whose inhabitants lack the liberal capitalist insights and technological know-how to properly occupy a city” (120). Where does that conclusion come from? Doesn’t thinking about environmental racism condemn those “liberal capitalist insights” for using their “technological know-how” to dump waste on communities whose protests can be ignored because they lack the power to resist the forces of capital and of governments captured by capital?

“Rescue curriculum,” on the other hand, focuses on green technologies and “the technologies of government” as solutions, but the subtext of this curriculum is, for Paperson, hidden: “The hidden curriculum of rescue naturalizes city planning, urban redevelopment, and de-ghetto-ification as inevitable remedies for pain. It positions ghettoized communities as wards under settler colonial sovereignty” (120). In addition, rescue curriculum “promotes green cities, a wealth of green consumption through which the multicultural cosmopolitan citizen earns his/her/our right to be the nouveau settler. Enter place-based curriculum” (120). I’m not sure what Paperson would propose instead of this “rescue curriculum”: green technologies are unlikely to save us from ourselves, but does that mean we should ignore their existence? Do green technologies really displace ghettoized communities or remove their agency? I am not following this argument.

Finally, Paperson takes on place-based curriculum. It “helps write the master narrative of future, green, metropolitan neo-colonies. Often inclusive, multicultural, and celebratory, such curriculum highlights the urban as a place of diversity, flavored by communities of color” (120). This fantasy “violently erases Indigenous understandings of that land and place,” Paperson argues. “If Native people are mentioned at all, they are almost always only as a premodern population who were pleasantly ‘one with nature,’ or ecological Indians so few in number that the ecological settler becomes a ‘good neighbour’ or benevolent reinhabitant” (121). This fantasy “inscribes settler colonialism as a done deal, renders urban native youth as inauthentic Indians, and denies contemporary Native relationships to land and place” (121). This curriculum contains a hidden teleology: “native people used to live here. White people settled here; they fled. People of color replaced white people; they suffer. Coming up, the multicultural cosmopolitan citizen will replace people of color. When the Great American City is finally built, all the white people will be colorful, and all the colored people will be gone” (121). I wonder where Paperson sees their own experience in this narrative. Where do they live? What is their relationship to ghettoized people of color or to Indigenous people? As in “Decolonization Is Not a Metaphor,” I get the sense here that the best thing for everyone would be white people leaving—that’s the point, I think, of Tuck and Yang’s fantasy about Natty Bumppo leaving or vanishing from the land he unjustly occupies:

In the unwritten decolonial version of Cooper’s story, Hawkeye would lose his land back to  the  Mohawk—the  real  people  upon  whose  land  Cooperstown  was  built  and  whose  rivers, lakes, and forests Cooper mined for his frontier romances. Hawkeye would shoot his last arrow, or his last long-rifle shot, return his eagle feather, and would be renamed Natty Bumppo, settler on  Native  land.  The  story  would  end  with  the  moment  of  this  recognition.  Unresolved  are  the questions: Would a conversation follow after that between Native and the last settler? Would the settler leave or just vanish? Would he ask to stay, and if he did, who would say yes? These are questions that will be addressed at decolonization, and not a priori in order to appease anxieties for a settler future. (Tuck and Yang 17)

Paperson, of course, is Yang—his faculty web site says that “[s]ometimes he writes as la paperson, an avatar that irregularly calls” (“Wayne Yang”)—and I see a crossover in the ideas expressed in the two essays. What I’m not seeing, yet, in either essay is a sense of where Yang positions himself and his experience, or any sense that settlers have any kind of future other than erasure. For Tuck and Yang, and for Paperson, there seems to be no way that settlers and Indigenous peoples can co-exist.

Paperson is “deeply ambiguous about critical environmentalisms, such as movements in eco-feminism, deep ecology, and antiracist environmental justice. These are important trajectories in critical scholarship and activism around environmental justice, and ought to inform any decolonizing framework,” but they are “not automatically the opposite of settler colonialism” (121). Settler colonialism, in its guise of settler environmentalism, “describes efforts to redeem the settler as ecological, often focusing on settler identity and belonging through tropes of Indigenous appropriations—returning to the wildman or demigoddess, claiming of one’s natural or ‘native’ self and thus the land, again” (121). Living off the grid, for instance, “is a terra nullius imaginary of a somewhere, nowhere, neverplace where one is no longer a settler” (121). Really? We have solar panels on the roof of our house, but I don’t deny being a settler: I think that Paperson is being unfair and obtuse here. It’s possible to try to live in a way that doesn’t tie one to electricity generated by burning coal without fantasizing that one isn’t a settler. I know that from personal experience.

For Paperson, “greening the ghetto can mask a neoliberal curriculum of whitening the ghetto with ‘better-educated,’ ecologically ‘responsible,’ global citizens,” but more radical forms of environmentalism “can also uphold the settler fantasy of sacred ‘wilderness’—another form of unpeopled land—that must be restored or preserved” (121). It can, sure, but is that fantasy inevitable? We know that Indigenous peoples managed the land for millennia, and that Indigenous science provides insights into ways that we can stop ourselves from destroying the environment we depend on for our survival (see Buckiewicz). How current are those fantasies of a sacred wilderness, empty of human presence, when we know that wilderness is replete with signs of Indigenous presences? Could one accuse Paperson of being somewhat reductive here? 

Paperson quotes Indigenous writer Sandy Grande’s argument that “both Marxists and capitalists view land and natural resources as commodities to be exploited” (qtd. 121), and suggests that “[s]ocial justice endeavors all take place on Native land,” before turning to the Occupy movement. I’m not that interested in the Occupy movement, which seems to have run its course—besides, I read Craig Fortier’s Unsettling the Commons: Social Movements Within, Against, and Beyond Settler Colonialism,a book-length critique of that movement, when I was studying for my comprehensives—so I’m going to skip over the way that Occupy Oakland failed to address issues related to decolonization and instead turn to Paperson’s discussion of critical cartography as a method. “Critical cartography is the mapping of structural oppression, as well as the critique of mapping as an exercise of power,” they write. “Although it uses tools from traditional cartography, it also redirects our gaze back onto the master narrative of maps. Mapping creates taxonomies of land, water, and peoples. It generates false territories and also false temporalities, as land becomes property in a linear history of shifting ownerships. Mapping is knowledge generated in the service of empire” (123). So, maps are not in themselves critical, “even if they document social injustice” (123). Rather, the stories told about maps, the narratives that surround them, may be critical (123). For Paperson, “[c]ritical cartography is an essential method for understanding the coloniality of space” (124).

Yet, according to Paperson, “critical cartography is not by itself a decolonizing method, just as deconstructing coloniality is not the same as decolonization” (124). Paperson cites Linda Tuhiwai Smith to argue that a decolonizing methodology “repatriates Indigenous land and life as they have survived before, during, and beyond colonialism” (124). “Decolonization is not just symbolic,” Paperson contends: “its material core is repatriation of Native life and land, which may be incommensurable with settler re-inhabitation of Native land. It is not a stance that grants an easy solidarity with more inclusive social justice projects—even if they are antiracist, feminist, or environmentalist” (124). Indeed, the incommensurability of decolonization with “settler re-inhabitation of Native land” would suggest a very difficult solidarity with social justice projects that involve settlers, since decolonization would apparently require the erasure or departure of settlers from Turtle Island. 

Paperson explains the difference between place and space, on the one hand, and land on the other: 

Land is not generalizable the way space and place are generalizable. Land is both people and place, that is, Native people constitute and are constituted by Native land. You was where you lived. Indigenous place-based education is land education. Place-based education, from a settler perspective, is far more inclusive—place becomes something everyone can claim, can tell a story about. Place-based education leads to restorying and re-inhabitation, whereas land education leads towards repatriation. (124)

So, if I’m reading Paperson correctly, settlers cannot use the term “land”; it is a term that is to be used by Indigenous people only, because it addresses the relationship between Indigenous peoples and their land. “Storied land moves place back, between, and beyond to Native land, providing a transhistorical analysis that unroots settler maps and settler time,” Paperson continues, suggesting, again, that the notion of storying land is also unavailable to settlers—because that would be a form of re-inhabitation, a recolonization (124). If this is true, what does it mean for the course I just finished, or for my larger research project? Nothing good, I fear.

Paperson now turns to specific sites near Oakland: the Mission Dolores in San Francisco, the Chevron refinery, San Quentin penitentiary, Alcatraz, and other prisons around San Francisco Bay, in what I think might be an example of restorying (124-25). “Despite being narrated as ghosts, as people long-gone, Indians are enough of a corporeal problem for the settler agenda that California has never stopped trying to legislate them out of the land,” Paperson writes (125). Part of that process of legislation allowed for Indian children to be removed from their families and sold into slavery (126). As I read Paperson’s words, I’m listening to an Elder from Cowessess First Nation, Florence Sparvier, describing her experience at Marieval Indian Residential School, where to date 751 unmarked graves have been discovered, and I’m thinking about the ways that legislation removed First Nations children from their families and then did not punish churches or the government for their negligence in caring for those children—because, perhaps, their physical deaths were as much part of the goal of those schools as were the deaths of their languages and cultures. The history is sickening—and it’s not really history, since it reverberates in the present. 

Paperson alludes to a project he helped to create in which young men from Oakland took classes from men serving life sentences at San Quentin. He refuses to give details about that project, except to say that it “provided outlawed wisdoms to be transmitted in the only form possible: storytelling” (126). Linked to that project was another in which activist Cesar Cruz brought gang-affiliated youth together, teaching them “to seek the sacred in between the cracks of desegregation” (126). Again, Paperson refuses to talk about those stories, except “to say that within them, the coloniality that dislocated black/brown/red/yellow/white peoples became their node of convergence as people relocated to Ohlone land” (126). I don’t understand what that means.

Finally, Paperson arrives at their conclusion: a discussion of the Shellmound Peace Walks organized by the group Indian People Organizing for Change. “Walks to the shellmound burial sites around the ancestral, unceded Ohlone lands: covering nearly 300 miles over 3 weeks at 18 miles a day, from Vallejo to San Jose to San Francisco,” they write (127). Indigenous people have always lived in the Bay Area: it “was a place of transboundary relationships among different Ohlone and Miwok people” (127). The Bay Area is not “an urban Commons to be re-inhabited, but Ohlone land, a social place, a place from which one misses home and a place to which one can enact some desires to leave home. As an intertribal place, Native-Native relations to Ohlone land and to each other can teach us valuable lessons in re-imagining ethical forms of solidarity beyond the ecological Commons,” they write (127). 

Storied land is a partial answer to the question of how to uproot settler maps of territory (127). “A poetics of land learns from human resistance to mapping, from peoples’ and nature’s transgressions of maps, and from land itself as a bearer of memory,” Paperson writes. Land resists notions of fixed space, they continue, citing Mishuana Goeman (127). But those stories must be told by Indigenous peoples, not by settlers. “Why Huey Newton became free in prison, while Johnny Cash hated every inch of San Quentin, has to do with a fundamental colonial difference between people who see themselves as constituted by versus dwelling in accursed/sacred space,” Paperson writes, conferring Indigeneity upon Newton in a perhaps surprising move (127). So Newton was constituted by prison, while Cash saw it as accursed. I think I would have to read Agamben’s book, Homo Sacer, to begin to unpack this argument, because Paperson seems reluctant to explain the concept of terra sacer and its connection to homo sacer clearly, or else I’m just too thick to understand their explanation. But Paperson gives another example of being constituted by a sacred connection to the land in a story about Geronimo Pratt, a Black Panther leader who was held in solitary confinement for years (129). Pratt “spoke about his time in solitary confinement in sacred terms of connection with the earth and sky,” Paperson writes. “He described initially despising the ants who would come into his cell. Through humility, he learned to learn from the ants, who offered a connection to the earth through the cracks in the prison. According to Pratt, the ants loved him back, bringing him food and providing him company” (128). I wonder if that story could be expanded outside of a prison cell, perhaps to think about loving other abject creatures—quack grass or dandelions or leafy spurge—or if, again, that expansion would be a form of appropriation, this time an appropriation of Pratt’s experience. Paperson’s essay leaves me with so many  unanswered questions like that one.

“A poetics of land is, because outlaw life and outlaw land inherently disrupt propertied life and land as property,” Paperson concludes. “As storied land contends with the current condition, settler colonialism, it elucidates pathways of de/colonization of land and people” (128). The essay ends with unanswered questions: “What are the colonial pathways that bring our people into this land? Where do our pathways diverge from Indigenous pathways? Where do they converge with settler colonial ones? In other words, what is our relationship to settler colonialism, to Indigenous survivance and tribal sovereignty?” (128). I sense Paperson implicating themselves here, in the pronoun “our,” as a settler, or at least as a non-Indigenous person, but I would like to see more of that self-implication. What is Paperson’s relationship to land as property? Do they own their own home? What is Paperson’s connection to either settler colonialism or Indigenous survivance? Where is Paperson in this argument, in other words? Perhaps the critiques made in this essay, and the activist pedagogical projects it describes, are intended to identify those connections, but while they suggest what’s wrong with settler environmentalism, they don’t offer any sense of how to create a form of environmentalism that doesn’t fall into those errors. So, as I’ve indicated in my comments as I read this essay—and this post is very much an immanent reading, a first encounter with the text, an admission of my failures to understand and my unanswered questions—I’m frustrated by this essay. Perhaps I should try again, but I’m not convinced that a second reading would increase my understandings or answer those questions. For the first time in ages, I find myself wishing for a seminar class in which a group of peers could try to unpack Paperson’s essay. That’s not on the agenda–the course for which I read this article is all over now, except for the final paper–and so I’m left somewhat confused about how it might relate to my research—or if it relates to my research at all, since as a settler, I’m part of the problem Paperson describes, rather than part of its solution. 

Works Cited

Buckiewicz, Amanda. “How Indigenous science could help us with our sustainability and diversity crisis.” Quirks and Quarks, CBC Radio, 4 June 2021. https://www.cbc.ca/radio/quirks/jun-5-shark-extinction-event-caffeine-can-t-keep-you-functional-the-pachyderm-s-proboscis-and-more-1.6052388/how-indigenous-science-could-help-us-with-our-sustainability-and-diversity-crisis-1.6052394.

Paperson, La. “A Ghetto Land Pedagogy: An Antidote for Settler Environmentalism.” Environmental Education Research, vol. 20, no. 1, 2014, pp. 115-30. DOI: 10.1080/13504622.2013.865115.

Swiderska, Krystyna. “Protecting indigenous cultures is crucial for saving the world’s biodiversity.” The Conversation, 14 February 2020, https://theconversation.com/protecting-indigenous-cultures-is-crucial-for-saving-the-worlds-biodiversity-123716.

Tuck, Eve, and K. Wayne Yang. “Decolonization Is Not a Metaphor.” Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education, & Society, vol. 1, no. 1, 2012, pp. 1-40. https://jps.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/des/article/view/18630.

“Wayne Yang, Professor & Provost of John Muir College.” Ethnic Studies Department, UC San Diego, https://ethnicstudies.ucsd.edu/people/yang.html.

Pohanna Pyne Feinberg, “Re-storying Place: The Pedagogical Force of Walking in the Work of Indigenous Artist-Activists Émilie Monnet and Cam”

Feinberg’s essay begins with the renaming of Amherst Street in Montreal in October 2019. The new name, Atateken Street, refers to a term in the Kanien’kéha (Mohawk) language that means “the idea of equality among people” (164). The street’s previous name honoured the genocidal British general, Jeffrey Amherst, notorious for distributing blankets on which people dying of smallpox had lain to First Nations peoples in an attempt, he wrote, “to extirpate this execrable race” (qtd. 164). Atateken Street is the first street in Montreal to have a Mohawk name, and it reflects the importance of “the Kanien’kehá:ka nation, the recognized custodians of these lands and waters” (164). 

“The controversy that led to the street’s renaming reflects a colonial legacy that is pervasive in this region and characterizes the disjointed sociopolitical context in which the artist-activists Émilie Monnet (Anishinaabe/French) and Cam (Innu/Québecois) both work within,” Feinberg writes. “Although we are witness to dominant colonial narratives that have been systematically perpetuated for generations but are not being challenged, Indigenous languages, cultural symbols and stories are still rarely seen or heard in everyday places” (164). The two artists take up these concerns in their practices (164). 

Monnet is an interdisciplinary artist whose work spans theatre, performance, visual, and sound art, and she is also the founding director of Onishka, an interdisciplinary organization (165). Cam is a street artist and the coordinator of Unceded Voices, which supports street artists who are Indigenous women, women of colour, queer, two-spirit and gender non-conforming (165). “Cam and Monnet expose and respond to visual culture that is complicity in the systematic erasure of Indigenous voices and perspectives,” Feinberg writes (165). Walking “plays a generative role in the work of both artists. They employ walking as a pedagogical force that is personally grounded and politically imbued. In other words, while walking, they come into relation with multiple and intersecting encounters with people, places and things that inspirit their relationship to place” (165). For that reason, walking in their work “is fundamentally pedagogical”: “it enables interactions with the place-world that inform reflections and intentions” (165). For Feinberg, “the identity and memory of place is formed by our traces—the manifold ways that our presence effects where we walk” (165). It’s not a case where place affects us; we also affect place, and that’s particularly true of the work of Cam and Monnet, which shapes “the felt and seen world to better reflect their sense of belonging to the regions they move through and with” (165).

Feinberg, drawing on Jane Bennett’s work, suggests that “each step is charged with connectivity,” and so “this aliveness that radiates can be attributed to the inherent vibrancy or dynamics of place,” even in urban centres, “in green spaces and in the plant life that emerges through cracks in concrete or asphalt” and in weather (165). “We are propelled and compelled by our interactions with the dynamics of place as they move with and through us,” Feinberg continues, describing places as “experiential entanglements” (166). She draws on Doreen Massey’s discussion of place as a “constellation of processes” (qtd. 166). Of course, many factors limit the ability of people to experience space (gender, race, class, physical ability) (166). Cam and Monnet “both invite us to consider how we can reveal, confront, alter and contribute to dismantling and transforming these disempowering limitations in our relational context of place” (166). Their works “are efforts to transfigure public urban space to contest dominant narratives while honouring the presence of those who have been disavowed” (166). Those practices are ways to re-story place, Feinberg suggests, citing Robin Wall Kimmerer’s Braiding Sweetgrass (166).

“Cam’s art practice focuses on creating more spaces for Indigenous voices and stories through street art such as wheat paste (applying paper prints to walls with a glue made from wheat and water), stencils and textile arts,” Feinberg writes. “Since 2012, Cam has been weaving Indigenous feminism and queer politics into the everyday visual tapestry of the city” (166). She looks for sites for her work by walking in her neighbourhood with other women (166-67). In this way, “[w]alking is a co-creative reflective mode through which she listens to the dynamics of place to consider where her works will resonate and provoke” (167). Her work is colourful and often includes text (167). Cam puts her art in the streets because of “her experience of walking and feeling like her culture and identity are not reflected” there (168). She is also motivated “by the potential benefit that her images and texts might offer others” (168). Cam has also organized events where murals were collectively created in Montreal (168-70). She has taken Feinberg’s students out for mural walks, offering a “formal and semiotic interpretation of the works while also sharing anecdotes about the processes that were involved with coordinating, making and preserving the murals” (171). “The resonant emotions and revelations sparked by the guided mural walk and subsequent discussions move the students from a theoretical treatment of decolonization as an abstract word towards a recognition that to decolonize is a personal, felt, lived and reflective process,” Feinberg writes (173). 

Next, Feinberg describes Monnet’s 2015 work Hand on Hand, which began as a guided walk from the ViVA! Performance Art Biennale building and went around the corner to the building where the Royal Canadian Navy Office is located (174). Once she arrived there, she discussed the symbolism of the logo, which shows two hands shaking (174). “The participants were invited to reflect on the physicality of this gesture by walking to the following destination while holding hands with another participant,” Feinberg writes. “it was remarkable to witness nearly one hundred people walking together down a narrow sidewalk while holding hands with another person. For those involved, the simple gesture challenged our comfort level with the unexpected intimacy involved with touching the hand of a stranger” (174). The event was convivial and comfortable: “Through our awkward bodily entanglements, we were drawn into consideration about the implications of becoming so closely intertwined, perhaps not entirely by choice, along an unknown trajectory” (174). The event’s next stop was at a monument fountain in a small park that’s intended to commemorate the voyages of Jacques Cartier (174). Monnet “read from texts and sang with her drum to draw attention to the fragments of Donnacona’s story that are silenced by the historical narrative conveyed by the fountain” while the group held hands in a circle and listened to the water (174-75). 

Monnet also states that walking in the bush “allows for intuitive listening,” which informed her 2018 multimedia performance work Okinum (177). Okinum (dam in Anishnaabemowin) was inspired by a dream about a giant beaver; the solo performance was “an exploration of language, identity, [and] the presence of ancestors” (178). Okinum used movement, sound design, and video installation to examine Monnet’s heritage and spirit, and the artist described how ideas were revealed to her while walking with the territory of her ancestors (178). 

These works “shed light on the possibilities of walking as a pedagogical force—a force that enables learning through somatic as well as affective emplacement,” Feinberg writes. “The emplacement of their work, however, is not limited to the tactile connection of their feet, but rather is also formed by story-sharing through social media and other influences that have helped to make public simultaneous and thematically intersecting walking-based initiatives in multiple Indigenous communities” (180). Those activities include Aanischaaukamikw Cree Cultural Institute’s 2016 exhibition Footprints: A Walk through Generations, presented in Ouje-Bougoumou in Quebec (180). “The central message of the exhibition was to emphasize that walking contributes to reinforcing ‘the strength of our culture, the strength of our people, and what we have gained from our relationship with the territory, with the land, with the animals’” (Herodier and Little, qtd. 180-81). Feinberg also discusses the 2014 walk of 20 Cree youth from Mistissini to Montreal in protest against a proposed uranium mine on their traditional lands and the water walks of Josephine Mandamin. “Each of these examples of walking-based actions influence Cam and Émilie’s work,” Feinberg states (181). They see their art as taking place in solidarity with such walking initiatives (181). 

“The pedagogical force of walking in Cam and Monnet’s work is palpable in how they each develop ideas, questions and responses while walking, but it also manifests in how one encounters their work,” Feinberg concludes. “By offering opportunities to engage with Indigenous perspectives, as well as reconsider residual colonial narratives, their work reconfigures our relationship to where and how we walk, both visually and conceptually,” thereby contributing “to indigenizing and decolonizing place by shedding light on Indigenous voices, both past and present” (181-82). Cam and Monnet’s work makes their perspectives and presence as Indigenous women known and heard, honours their ancestors, amplifies Indigenous voices, contests colonial narratives, reconfigures collective memory and contributes “to the re-storying of place through artistic intervention” (182).

Feinberg’s essay presents me with an account of two walking artists I didn’t know about. Its final paragraph introduces me to a literature of walking written by arts educators—something I might look at if I have time. I find the notion of walking as part of an artistic research process interesting, and could easily align that with the research I’ve been doing. And the reference to Jane Bennett’s work suggests that I should read her book sooner rather than later, as the reference to Doreen Massey’s work suggests that I should probably reread her work.As well, Feinberg’s use of Robin Wall Kimmerer might suggest that I should finish Braiding Sweetgrass, although in one of our class discussions it was dismissed as overly romantic. There is so much to read—and it feels like there is so little time in which to do that reading. The trick is to find a way to balance walking and reading, something I haven’t been able to do since last summer. I’ll have to try harder.

Work Cited

Feinberg, Pohanna Pyne. “Re-storying Place: The Pedagogical Force of Walking in the Work of Indigenous Artist-Activists Émilie Monnet and Cam.” International Journal of Education Through Art, vol. 17, no. 2, pp. 163-85. DOI: 10.1386/eta_00056_1.

Zoe Todd, “Fish, Kin and Hope: Tending to Water Violations in amiskwaciwâskahikan and Treaty Six Territory”

Plastiglomerate sample collected by Patricia Corcoran and Kelly Jazvac (Todd 102)

Métis/otipemisiw anthropologist Zoe Todd begins her essay, “Fish, Kin and Hope: Tending to Water Violations in amiskwaciwâskahikan and Treaty Six Territory,” with the 2016 oil spill on the North Saskatchewan River, in which Husky Energy Inc. spilled some 200,000 litres of oil mixed with diluent into the river near the border between Alberta and Saskatchewan (103). Cities and First Nations on the river had to take emergency measures to protect their drinking water, and “the oil and diluents killed many more-than-human beings within the river,” including beaver and herons (103). Todd reports being horrified as she watched news coverage of the spill from her home in Ottawa (103). “I grew up along the kisiskâciwanisîpiy (North Saskatchewan River), in the city of amiskwaciwâskahikan (Edmonton, Alberta),” she writes:

To speak of Edmonton/amiskwaciwâskahikan is to speak a water truth. It is nestled along, and spans, the banks of the mighty kisiskâciwani-sîpiy, which has carved its way deep into the soil and clay and sand and stone to yield steep banks that cut through Edmonton like an artery, supplying the city with water, with life. The river binds Edmonton to a broader watershed. The clear mountain waters, which originate deep in the Rocky Mountains at the Columbia Icefield, become turbid and inscrutable by the time they flow past the factories and sewage plants and homes and bridges of amiskwaciwâskahikan. But upstream of Edmonton, a four-hour drive south-west of the city, near Rocky Mountain House, you can still see the river running clear and with promise. (103)

Todd’s family is “deeply bound up with” that river (103). As it cuts through Edmonton, its banks conceal “dinosaur bones in secret pockets” which “act as reminders of an order of existence in this place that today churns and turns on the risks and riches of Alberta’s oil and gas economy” (104).

“The fossil fuels which animate the political economy of my home province are a paradoxical kind of kin—the bones of dinosaurs and the traces of flora and fauna from millions of years ago which surface in rocks and loamy earth in Alberta act as teachers for us, reminding us of the life that once teemed here,” Todd writes. “But, the insatiable desire to liberate these long-gone beings from their resting place, to turn the massive stores of carbon and hydrogen left from eons of life in this place, weaponises these fossil-kin, these long-dead beings, and transforms them into threats to our very existence as humans” (104). In addition, the plastics we make from those fossil fuels end up in the air and water and land, and the oil itself moves through “pipelines that pervade every corner of my home province” (104). In 2016, “the oily progeny of the petro-economy breached the banks of the river that four generations of my Métis family has been born alongside,” she continues. “This watery violation of the river prompted many people to take stock of the socio-political, economic and legal-governance responsibilities we hold to the lands, waters, fish, beavers, herons and other more-than-human beings of the prairies” (104). Todd describes the glaciers and the rivers as “watery bodies,” suggesting their animate quality, and she traces their flow into Hudson Bay—a destination that makes “the struggles of unassuming prairie rivers a matter of global concern” (104). 

Todd describes her birth in a hospital in Edmonton, and the births of her ancestors along that river (105). She only knows her grandfather through stories, the way she only knows “past-Edmonton” or “the waters and fish that were once healthy and abundant” through stories (105). Fish have been her teachers, she says, although her grandfather “was animated by a different animal, horses,” but she has a similar passion for fish (105). She brings her grandfather’s love of horses “to bear on the urgent and entangled challenges of the settler-colonial and petro-state violations of the waters” of her homeland (105). She is concerned about “our reciprocal responsibilities to more-than-human beings within landscapes that had been heavily violated by settler-colonial economic and political exigencies” (105). 

Elsewhere, Todd has written about how working with the Inuvialuit community of Paulatuuq in the Northwest Territories taught her “about the dynamic and creative ways in which Paulatuuqmiut (Paulatuuq people) assert their own legal-governance paradigms and Indigenous legal order to protect the well-being of fish in the face of complex colonial and environmental challenges” (105-06). That work taught her that her Métis upbringing had oriented her “to a Métis legal order which informs my responsibilities to fish, water and the more-than-human beings that populate Treaty Six Territory along the North Saskatchewan, Red Deer, Battle and Athabasca Rivers” (106). That upbringing also taught her “the necessity of thinking about and thinking with fish in the urban context” (106). Now she understands how that teaching “was an instructive form of philosophy and praxis which imbued within me a sense of my reciprocal responsibilities to place, more-than-human beings and time,” she writes (106). “But what of my responsibilities to ‘inert’ or polluting materials, like the oil that spilled into the North Saskatchewan River this summer?” she asks. “What does it mean for me to dwell in an active and philosophical way in the realities of the ‘modernist mess’ and ‘toxic vitalism’ which provinces like Alberta and Saskatchewan have been saddled with through extractive settler-colonial political economies?” (106).

In order to “tease apart” her “relationality to the various agents involved in, and impacted by, the breach of the Husky pipeline,” she engages the political philosophies of the fishermen she met in Paulatuuq (106). “Having come to understand fish as nonhuman persons, it is possible for me to situate fish within the legal-political landscapes of Indigenous de-colonial resistance and refraction in Canada,” she writes. “Far harder for me to address have been the ways in which the very pollutants involved in the Husky oil spill are themselves the extracted, processed, heated, split, and steamed progeny of the fossilised carbon beings buried deep within the earth of my home province” (106). “What does it mean to approach carbon and fossil beings, including those spilled into the kisiskâciwani-sîpiy, as agential more-than-human beings in their own right?” she asks (106). That strikes me as an odd question, since they are long dead; I was expecting the perhaps more obvious question of how Todd, like the rest of us, is implicated in the carbon economy that is destroying our planet—changing its climate, polluting its waters, causing microplastics to end up in every ocean? Perhaps that question is too obvious, but it strikes me as more vital than the agency of the fern forests that decayed into coal, oil, and gas.

That’s where my mind goes, but it’s not where Todd’s goes. She turns to the work of her colleague Heather Davis, who calls upon us “to tend to our relationality and reciprocal responsibilities to the progeny of the petro-capitalist state”; in her work, Davis “explores how humans are making sense of, and tending to, the growing global geologic presence of plastic” (106). We might as well ask how we make sense of and tend to the cancer that is eating away at our bones. Davis asks us to consider plastic and other “offspring of our petrochemical politics as kin” (106). Todd compares Davis’s approach to plastic as kin to Kim TallBear’s discussion of pipestone as kin, and suggests that both have forced her to reorient her relationship to fossils and stone (106-07):

I have, admittedly, viewed oil and oil-progeny as contaminants, or pollutants, and the oil itself as imbued with messy human politics, which extract it from the ground and flood pipeline arteries stretched across the entire continent. Davis’s work challenges me to train my attention not only towards the fleshy beings I am so intimately familiar with—fish and birds and beavers and moose—but to also mobilise those aspects of Métis law that I grew up with in the service of imagining how we may de-weaponise the oil and gas that corporate and political bodies have allowed to violate waters, lands and atmospheres across the prairies. (107)

I’m not sure what that means, or what it means to “weaponize” oil and gas: even if we viewed it as a sacrament, it would still be toxic. 

But Todd presses on, asking what “oil/gas pluralities look like” (107). I’m sensing a philosophical or theoretical intertext in the word “pluralities,” but I don’t know what it might be. “It is not the oil itself that is toxic,” she writes, since it stayed underground for millions of years without causing any trouble (107). “[T]hese oily materials are not, in and of themselves, violent or dangerous,” she continues. “Rather, the ways that they are weaponised through petro-capitalist extraction and production turn them into settler-colonial-industrial-capitalist contaminants and pollutants” (107). That’s true, but only because surface seeps of oil—which would’ve occurred for millennia before it was discovered that petroleum could be used as a fuel in the nineteenth century—were too small to cause much ecological damage. Not everything that is natural is wholesome: think of plants that are toxic to some species—the blue-green algae that appear on prairie lakes in late summer, for example. I’m tempted to complicate my response to Todd by veering off into a discussion of Jacques Derrida’s discussion of the pharmakon, the medicine that can also, in the wrong doses or for the wrong person, be poisonous—but I’m not sure that would be useful: I’m not sure there’s a safe environmental exposure to plastic or to the fire retardants or pesticides developed since the Second World War. Some things are just bad.

Todd disagrees with me. “It is here that I am challenged to reconsider my reactions to the oil flowing along the river,” she writes (107). The oil spilled into the North Saskatchewan is a contaminant, she admits (107). “But it is not this material drawn from deep in the earth that is violent,” she contends. “it is the machinations of human political-ideological entanglements that deem it appropriate to carry this oil through pipelines running along vital waterways, that make this oily progeny a weapon against fish, humans, water and more-than-human worlds” (107). Again, I’m not sure “weapon” is the right word, since I doubt oil companies deliberately destroy those living creatures; rather, they accept their destruction as a cost of doing business, as an economic externality that doesn’t figure in their balance sheets. “Weapon” suggests intentionality, does it not? Are oil spills deliberate or are they negligent? If the oil had stayed in the ground where, arguably, it belongs—since releasing it into the environment, especially the atmosphere, is likely to return our climate to what it was in the Mesozoic Age, which will end much of life as we know it—would there be a problem? No—except for the whales, which were being hunted to near extinction by the need for lamp oil before petroleum was discovered as a substitute. 

“So what other worlds can we dream of for the remnants of the long-gone dinosaurs, of the flora and fauna that existed millions of years ago?” Todd asks. “What legal-governance and philosophical paradigms can we mobilise to de-weaponise oil today?” (107). She’s not sure she has an immediate answer, “other than that we must shift the logics of the petro-economy, which are emboldened to contaminate whole rivers and watersheds with oil and diluent, because those narrow conditions of existence are narrowing ever more in the context of the so-called Anthropocene” (107). If we don’t do that, then “we may go the way of the dinosaurs, and it will be because the dominant human ideological paradigm of our day forgot to tend with care to the oil, the gas and all the beings of this place. Forgot to tend to relationships, to ceremony (in all the plurality of ways this may be enacted), to the continuous co-constitution of life-worlds between humans and others” (107). I’m not sure what ceremony means in the context of oil and gas, and I wish Todd had given an example; the best thing we could’ve done would have been to have known, in advance, what damage using petroleum would do, but that foreknowledge is beyond the capacity of a limited and fallible species like humans.

Todd’s immediate response to this situation is to continue drawing fish (that’s her art practice) while engaging “with the complex responsibilities that come with re-framing fossils and fossil-beings—including the petrochemical products of decayed matter buried deep within the earth of my home province—as a kind of kin” (107). “This is a difficult philosophical and political negotiation for me to make, for I have throughout my entire life, seen oil solely in its weaponised form,” she concludes. However, the lessons she has learned from fish and Indigenous Elders can “bring this necessary philosophical and practical engagement into focus” (107). Her hope is that she can “encourage settler Canadians to understand that tending to the reciprocal relationality we hold with fish and other more-than-human beings is integral to supporting the ‘narrow conditions of existence’ in this place” (107).

I agree that settlers need to see themselves in relationship with “more-than-human beings” in this place, although I’m still not sure that including petrochemicals in that category is particularly helpful. I suppose I’m drawing lines around what I’m willing to accept as kin: fish, yes, but invasive carp, no; little bluestem grass, yes, but quack grass, no; crude oil left in the ground, maybe, but the mess left in the North Saskatchewan River by Husky’s negligence, hell no. And I wish Todd had considered the way she is implicated in the “weaponised form” of oil as well. Yes, the petroleum companies are responsible for most of the carbon emissions, and yet most of us drive cars that burn gasoline, heat our homes with fossil fuels, eat food grown with fertilizers derived from petrochemicals and shipped to stores in diesel-powered refrigerator trucks. My point is we’re all part of the weaponization of petroleum, and thinking about the way we are implicated might be more thoughtful than the fingerpointing and self-exception implied by the term “weaponised.” Or is thinking of a kinship relation to petroleum a form of self-implication? I’m not sure. Is there a contradiction between “weaponized” and being kin to petroleum? What would “non-weaponized” oil look like? What would we do with it–aside from leaving it in the ground?

Works Cited

Derrida, Jacques. Dissemination, translated by Barbara Johnson, University of Chicago Press, 1983.

Todd, Zoe. “Fish, Kin and Hope: Tending to Water Violations in amiskwaciwâskahikan and Treaty Six Territory.” Afterall, vol. 43, 2017, pp. 102-07. https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10.1086/692559.

Megan Bang, Lawrence Curley, Adam Kessel, Ananda Marin, Eli S. Suzukovich III and George Strack, “Muskrat Theories, Tobacco in the Streets, and Living Chicago as Indigenous Land”

“Muskrat Theories, Tobacco in the Streets, and Living Chicago as Indigenous Land” is a structurally interesting essay; it is built around the figure of the muskrat, an animal that lives in wetlands. Wetlands are typically drained as settlers arrive, and that was the case in Chicago, “formerly known as Shikaakwa, among other names of this land” (38), where what was a wetland was drained to build a city. “The filling in of wetlands–their intended erasure–can be viewed as perhaps a climatic move of settler colonialism–the attempted replacement of original lands with new land structures” (38). This drainage is an example of geographic violence (38). However, Indigenous people still live in Chicago, despite attempts at erasing them along with the region’s geography (38).

At the turn of the century, “Indigenous elders began walking the perimeter of the Great Lakes to bring awareness to the declining health of the lakes and the earth at large,” the co-authors continue (38). “Members of the Chicago inter-tribal American Indian community participated in one of these walks nearly a decade ago,” and out of that activity came a plan “to develop innovative science learning environments for Native youth, families, and community living in Chicago” (38). This paper, the co-authors state, is about survivable, which to them “means working to move our practice beyond historicized us/them dichotomies and willfully contradicting common narratives of assimilate and landless urban Indians toward longer views of our communities and our homelands not enclosed by colonial timeframes” (39).

The co-authors are Indigenous teachers from many different nations who “have learned to live, be members of families, and make community in Chicago/Shikaakwa, consciously together” (39). Their project sets out to decolonize science pedagogy by entering “Indigenous epistemologies and ontologies by (re)storying our relationships to Chicago as altered, impacted, yet still, always, Indigenous lands–whether we are in currently ceded urban territory or not” (39). The co-authors argue that “the constructions of land, simplicity or explicitly, as no longer Indigenous, are foundational implicated in teaching and learning about the natural world, whether that be in science education, place-based education or environmental education” (39). All of these are sites of struggle “because they typically reify the epistemic, ontological, and axiological issues that have shaped Indigenous histories” (39). They see these forms of education as “sites of potential transforming–forming a nexus between epistemologies and ontologies of land and Indigenous futurity,” but such transformation “will require engaging with land-based perspectives and desettling dynamics of settler colonialism that remain quietly buried in educational environments that engage learning about, with and in the land and all of its dwellers” (39).

For the co-authors, land-based science learning, which they call “an emergent form of urban Indigenous land-based pedagogies,” enables “epistemological and ontological balancing that significantly impacted learning for urban Indigenous youth and families” (39-40). Settler colonialism is entrenched in the forms of education they have identified (40). They critique place-based education and critical pedagogy; while these are competing or dichotomous discourses, the co-authors wonder about their possibilities for Indigenous liberation, since they are part of settler colonialism (40). “In our view, pathways and pedagogies that make explicit and resist the epistemic and ontological consequences of settler colonialism . . . will be necessary for viable, just, and sustainable change,” they write (41). Land-based education can do this work, but it must avoid reifying the epistemology of western knowledge and attacking Indigenous ways of knowing (41).

The “zero point epistemology” (ZPE) they see as characteristic of western knowledge “teaches conceptions of place in the service of settler colonial legitimacy,” which disavows Indigenous presence on the land and sees the land as either “fertile for human cultivation or endangered and in need of paternalistic protection” (41). Zero point epistemology sees learning as happening in the mind, rather than as connected “to one’s body and to lands” (41). “If we are to disrupt relationships to land that are constructed from the ZPE, then critical considerations of the ontological and epistemological foundations of much of the content being taken up and normalized in learning environments . . . is necessary,” they state (42).

Another way of thinking that must be disrupted are the “[d]eficit narratives of Indigenous communities,” which claim that urban spaces are not part of Indigenous homelands or sacred places (42). These stories frame Indigenous land “through postcontact dispossessions” and use “a logic of elimination” that suggests that urban Indigenous people are not truly Indigenous (42-43). They believe that developing “liberatory learning environments . . . will hinge on the ways in which constructs of culture and land, as well as the epistemic and ontological stances embedded therein, are conceptualized, encoded and facilitated” (43). Both zero point epistemology and anthropocentrism need to be disrupted; both are “destructive to Indigenous cosmologies,” which are premised on relationships with the world, not dominance over it (43). “Place-based education actively works toward being non anthropocentric,” but the co-authors believe that “accomplishing this transformation in lived practice, requires deeper consideration of the intersections between settler colonialism, the content derived from normative scientific paradigms that has been constructed around the division of nature and culture and is routinely taken up in learning environments” (43). Anthropocentrism is a way of thinking typical of settler colonialism (44). In contrast, they argue that the land is central, not its human inhabitants, and critique the ways that “mobile modernity” has disembedded people from places (44). Humans should be seen as part of ecosystems, not outside of them (44).

Next the co-authors describe their “six-year community-based design research project” (45). They discuss their methodology at length; I skipped over that part, particularly their discussion of the project’s planning phases, and landed on the issue of non-Indigenous plants and naming. They focus on common buckthorn, which was brought to North America in the early 19th century (47). That plant “is particularly destructive to woodlands and oak savanna and is considered a deeply problematic invasive species” (47). The co-authors object to the term “invasive species” because it denies a relationship to those species (47). “Thus, the term invasive species placed buckthorn, and other plants that were forcibly migrated to Chicago, outside our design principle around naming our plant relatives because while they may not have been our relatives, the term disposed them as relatives to any humans,” they write. “Further, the term failed to make visible the motivation of settlers that brought flora and fauna from their homelands to make these new lands like home–or what has been termed ecological imperialism” (47). They worked to find “a name centred in our own epistemic and ontological centers,” and began calling those species “plants that people lost their relationships with” (47). The learned more about how those plants migrated to Chicago “and their relationship with contact and colonialism” (47). “Using pedagogical language like ‘plants that people have lost their relationship with,’ ruptures the epistemology of the zero point, because it begins to always see ontology and epistemology and refuses a settler colonial narrative of and relationship to land,” they state (47-48). I find this discussion interesting, because my yard is being overrun with buckthorn, but I’m not sure that changing what I call the plant will mean anything in practical terms: I still need to remove it if I want the native species I’ve planted to survive. Otherwise they will be crowded out by the buckthorn, and that’s the only plant that will remain.

In a similar way, the researchers and research participants began thinking about their relationships to the waters as well (48). They compared natural and restored wetlands in order to make explicit “the ways in which the altering and restructuring of land in North America was and is a foundational practice in settler colonial paradigms” (48). They considered the difference between “land altering toward erasure and land altering for aiding” (48). They were particularly interested in areas that were becoming wetlands through neglect, where “plant relatives and water were remerging” in abandoned areas (48). They note that Indigenous people managed prairie areas by burning them, something that is done in prairie restorations as a way of eliminating non-native species (48). They began “to track and weave” into their thinking “the waves of ecological restructuring that has occurred in Chicago; from the filling of wetlands, to the reengineering of the direction of the Chicago river, the mass destruction of prairie lands for agriculture, to the importing of plants from other places” (48-49). “Relentless efforts to story land from long views of time and experience, and elevating the importance of and reclaiming naming practices we see as critical dimensions in urban land based pedagogies,” they state (49). They “worked to make always visible the history and change of the lands we live in, in short, land became our first teacher and our learning environments emerge from there” (49).

The point of their research, it seems, is to make sense of what plants “see” (49). This move is “a non-anthropocentric stance that ruptures normative paradigms of plants” (49). I’m not sure what that means; surely they aren’t dismissing the usual distinction between indigenous and non-indigenous plants–or are they? I wish the writing here was clearer. “In effect, re-centering our perceptual habits in Indigenous ontologies and epistemologies, we came to see land re-becoming itself and reclaim our continuing presence . . . in Chicago and Shikaakwa from narratives of deficit and disposed urban Indians,” they write (49).

“Re-storying Chicago required journeying through these layers of colonial fill, which quietly operate in teaching and learning environments to make visible dynamics of settler colonialism,” they conclude (49). Those dynamics include “the broad constructions [of] Indigenous absence and various forms of Indigenous presence,” “the constructions of lands as uninhabited or that make invisible the waves of land restructuring over time,” and “specific examples from an urban land based education project that centred Indigenous epistemologies and ontologies” (49). “As Indigenous people, we do not need to re-inhabit or learn to dwell in the places in which we have always dwelt,” they state (49). Their process was instead about “learning from land to restore(y) it and ourselves as original inhabitants–that is living our stories in contested lands and restoring land as the first teacher even in ‘urban’ lands” (49). “Narratives in which Indigenous people are absent, or relegated to a liberal multiculturalism that subsumes Indigenous dominion to occupancy, and narratives and positioning of land as backdrop for anthropocentric life, will only help to produce new narratives of territorial acquisition and fail to bring about needed social change,” they write (49). I am not sure what the word “dominion” is doing in that sentence: if Indigenous people had dominion over the land, how would Indigenous epistemologies and ontologies be different from their settler colonial counterparts? I don’t understand.

Being blind to the land would lead to a ceding of Indigenous epistemologies and ontologies, the co-authors continue (49). “Our project helped to expand the mental awakenings in our community and to build possibilities toward young people not being forced into genesis amnesia”–they cite Pierre Bourdieu here–“in the service of settler futurity,” the co-authors state. “The (re)storying of these ontologies and epistemologies meant we could move towards Indigenous identity and possibility living in our ceded lands not defined by current power paradigms of simultaneous dispossession and containment and able to resist and act on dimensions of political, sociological, and ideological prescriptions that produce them and ensure settler futures” (50). The paper ends, as it began, with the muskrat: “we believe Muskrat will dive and help re-story our lands again as we continue our paths of becoming” (50).

What to make of all of this? I’m not immediately sure. Perhaps the arrival of settlers in North America was like the arrival of the glaciers, causing similar geographic, biological, and now even climatic disruptions. But what can be done about that now? Can the land really take care of itself? Is weeding a garden–a vegetable garden or a planting of native prairie plants–really a paternalistic activity? How would that activity be different from the way Indigenous people used fire to knock back the woody plants that tend to invade grassland when they can, and instead encourage the growth of grasses that bison preferred to eat? I like their references to Doreen Massey’s notion of space as being composed of a multitude of unfinished stories, but I’m not sure how those references fit with the need to remove buckthorn (one of oh-so-many invasive species) from wetlands or forests or grasslands. Yes, buckthorn is now part of the story, but does that mean that the story must become one in which buckthorn (or leafy spurge or purple loosestrife or, hell, canola and barley) took over and left no space for anything else? I think about the issues this article raises as I walk around this city–particularly on its outskirts, which are a mixture of factories and fields of barley and wheat and canola–and wonder what it looked like here before settlers arrived. I understand that all the land is sacred, but it is so difficult to apprehend that sacredness when I’m walking past a farm-equipment factory or a field of canola, and so much easier to catch a glimpse of that sacredness when I’m on one of the few remnants of native grassland or in an aspen forest. Is there something fundamentally wrong about that response to the land, according to the authors of this essay? Is that–what? nostalgia? loss? grief?–an anthropocentric reaction, no different from the settlers who saw the grassland as an obstacle to getting rich growing wheat? (Not that they did–most of them.) I’m going to have to think more about this paper. I wish that I could figure it out immediately. But I’m not sure I can.

Work Cited

Bang, Megan, Lawrence Curley, Adam Kessel, Ananda Marin, Eli S. Suzukovich III, and George Strack. “Muskrat Theories, Tobacco in the Streets, and Living Chicago as Indigenous Land.” Environmental Education Research vol. 20, no. 1, 2014, pp. 37-55. DOI: 10.1080/13504622.2013.865113.

Shannon Webb-Campbell, “Reclaiming Indigenous Territories, Bead by Bead”

“Reclaiming Indigenous Territories, Bead by Bead” is a review of “Olivia Whetung: tibewh,” a show at Toronto’s Artspace in 2017. It’s also one of the texts I need to read for the course I’m taking. The reviewer, Shannon Webb-Campbell, a Mi’kmaq writer, begins by stating:

As a conversation between body, land and water, art by Indigenous women is potent medicine—it combats the colonial agenda and penetrates a monolithic art world. In waterways, there is a constant flow of intergenerational knowledge passing through the lakes, rivers and oceans; every body of water holds a spirit, a history and informs the land. Various landscapes and bodies of water shape our identity, culture and sense of belonging—and in turn, Indigenous art can offer an embodiment, a re-mapping and a reclaiming of our traditional lands, waters and bodies. (Webb-Campbell)

So the stakes of this work are high—higher than art made by settlers, it seems. No wonder Indigenous art can seem so powerful. I can’t imagine suggesting that anything I made or wrote offered a reclamation of anything.

Webb-Campbell says that walking into “Olivia Whetung: tibewh” felt like “an ancestral embrace—the same feeling that overcomes my body when standing at shoreline and looking into the horizon beyond water” (Webb-Campbell). “tibewh” translates from Anishinaabemowin to “a body of water, or shoreline you are in, or on,” and the show “taps into an ancestral re-mapping of the Trent-Severn Waterway” (Webb-Campbell). “Much like the linked-locked waters it depicts, ‘tibewh’ honours a shared shoreline between Indigenous and non-Indigenous vistas—yet it also questions viewers, and asks settlers and non-settlers to consider their relationship to these unceded and unsurrendered territories,” Webb-Campbell continues (Webb-Campbell). (That’s the first time I’ve seen the word “non-settlers” in print. I’m not sure I like it—the centring of settlers is a problem—although perhaps the point is that some people who are not Indigenous are not settlers, either.)

What is the art that generates this reconsideration? Whetung’s show presents “beadwork reinterpretations of each of the 42 locks along the 386 kilometres of [the] Trent-Severn Waterway” (Webb-Campbell). Whetung, Webb-Campbell suggests, asks viewers several questions through this work: “What is land? What is water? Who does it belong to?” And, most of all, “What are our responsibilities to these lands and waters we occupy? How do we mark and enact that responsibility?” (Webb-Campbell). Whetung, a member of Curve Lake First Nation, presents “a stunning beadwork re-orientation of the Trent-Severn Waterway,” but the show is about more than that: it “charts an Indigenous relationship to colonized waters” (Webb-Campbell). “Whetung witnesses each of the locks, and the bodies of water they separate, along the Trent-Severn from a bird’s-eye view,” Webb-Campbell continues. The work presents “the Creator’s vantage point” and “remind viewers we are all bodies locked by land, yet made of water” (Webb-Campbell).

Each of the 42 squares in the show is unique, and according to Webb-Campbell, they force each viewer to engage “their own unique relationship to the bodies of water depicted, and consider the physical, ecological, and emotional dimensions of that relationship” (Webb-Campbell). Aside from one trip to Peterborough, I don’t think I’ve really thought much about the Trent-Severn Waterway, and so I wouldn’t be able to come up with much in the way of a relationship to those rivers and lakes. “Whetung invites us to consider the water as body, and land as canvas,” she continues (Webb-Campbell). The Trent-Severn Waterway, which connects Lake Huron to Lake Ontario, is a National Historic Site, protected by Parks Canada, yet “Whetung’s work reminds that this system of travel has, for millennia, been filled with Indigenous species, spirits, waters and rivers” (Webb-Campbell).

Whetung studied Anishnaabemowin at university. She is a graduate of the MFA program at the University of British Columbia, and she “makes beadwork that embodies what it means to speak as an artist form Anishinaabe language; her art becomes both decolonial act and decolonial witness” (Webb-Campbell). Because the Trent-Severn Waterway was originally a military transportation route, Whetung’s work speaks back to that colonial history, suggesting “how intersecting passages of water have been colonized in an attempt to contain, control and exploit” (Webb-Campbell). Even though she sourced her imagery from Google Maps, “Whetung’s reworking of this imagery offers an attempt at re-writing, re-mapping and re-tracing the ancient memory of water” (Webb-Campbell). Working with the land is a decolonial practice; Whetung also works with her ancestors and traditional Anishnaabe knowledge systems, fusing “ancestral knowledge and contemporary technology to create an exhibition that is both political and provocative—an artistic retelling of traditional territory and settlement” (Webb-Campbell). I wish I’d seen it; I wonder if it would’ve been more meaningful in Peterborough or some other city on the Trent-Severn Waterway than in Toronto, a city that is rather withdrawn from the places Whetung’s work references. 

Work Cited

Webb-Campbell, Shannon. “Reclaiming Indigenous Territories, Bead by Bead.” Canadian Art, 27 June 2017, https://canadianart.ca/reviews/olivia-whetung-tibewh/.

C Magazine, number 136, guest edited by BUSH gallery

The third required reading in the course that began last week is an issue of C Magazine (number 136) guested edited by BUSH Gallery. According to the BUSH Gallery website,

BUSH Gallery is a space for dialogue, experimental practice and community engaged work that contributes to an understanding of how gallery systems and art mediums might be transfigured, translated and transformed by Indigenous knowledges, traditions, aesthetics, performance and land use systems. This model of decolonial, non-institutional ways to engage with and value Indigenous knowledge and Indigenous creative production is at the heart of BUSH Gallery. (BUSH)

It’s not entirely clear to me whether BUSH Gallery is a virtual project or if it has a physical location, or if it’s both. There’s not a lot of information on the gallery’s web site, other than its mission statement. However, elsewhere on the internet, I learn this:

Activated by Tania Willard, Peter Morin, and Gabrielle L’Hirondelle Hill, Jeneen Frei Njootli and many others, BUSH Gallery is an Indigenous-led, land-based, experimental and conceptual gallery that creates a radically inclusive space of art and action. (Toronto Biennial of Art)

Another description of a BUSH Gallery project in Winnipeg that I found online says this:

we strive to connect what we are doing as Indigenous artists with valuing and circulating within local Indigenous economies and communities, while also creating space for conceptual, experimental and performative land-based Indigenous led contemporary art. By practicing reciprocity and value-based systems of Indigenous knowledges, centred by our specific cultural backgrounds, we make galleries of thought, colour, land, sky, text and interrelationality. (Plug In ICA)

The artists who seem to be the prime movers behind BUSH Gallery are Indigenous: Peter Morin is from Tahltan First Nation; Tania Willard from Secwepemc First Nation; Gabrielle L’Hirondelle Hill is Cree and Métis; and Jeneen Frei Njootli describes herself as “2SQ Vuntut Gwitchin, Czech and Dutch” (University of British Columbia, Department of Art History, Visual Art & Theory). All of this tells me that BUSH Gallery is engaged in a variety of land-based, Indigenous-led, contemporary art practices—both object-oriented and relational or social—based in Indigenous values. And, if I’d only read the issue beforehand, I could’ve avoided all of that research, because much of it is revealed through the articles it includes.

However, only Willard and Morin acted as guest editors for this issue of C Magazine, according to its masthead. The issue begins with “The BUSH Manifesto”: 

BUSH gallery is a space for dialogue, experimental practice and community engaged work that contributes to an understanding of how gallery systems and art mediums might be transfigured, translated and transformed by Indigenous knowledges, traditions, aesthetics, performance and land use systems. This model of decolonial, non-institutional ways to engage with and value Indigenous knowledge and Indigenous creative production is at the heart of BUSH gallery. (6)

The gallery is described as “a trans-conceptual gallery space,” meaning that its purpose is “to reposition ideas born within Indigenous and western epistemological conditions” (6). “A trans-conceptual space requires your body to be in a constant state of flux—never settling, like the flow of water in a river,” the manifesto continues. “One of the goals of BUSH gallery is to articulate Indigenous creative land practices which are born out of a lived connection to the land” (6).

The gallery is “out on the land” and away from “the colonized space of art institutions”; it brings together Indigenous and non-Indigenous media, such as beading with installation art, or performance art and storytelling (6). 

A series of one-sentence paragraphs, or perhaps a poetic text structured through anaphora, follows, describing the characteristics of BUSH gallery:

BUSH gallery is alive and breathing.
BUSH gallery is on Indigenous lands.
BUSH gallery is animate and inanimate at the same time.
BUSH gallery is radically inclusive—all bodies and 
lands and kids and dogs and bears are welcome. (6)

BUSH gallery includes walking, Indigenous languages, and conversations; it “is in constant transition as the land is in constant transition,” it “knows that disruption inspires growth,” it “is a place of hope and no hope” (6). It is “for Indigenous and non-Indigenous art and artists and curators and thinkings and grandmothers and grandfathers and fathers and mothers and cousins and aunties and uncles” (7). “Bush gallery is sometimes a blockade, sometimes a bridge, always a balancing beam,” the manifesto continues (7), again speaking to the connection (I think) the gallery makes between Indigenous and non-Indigenous artists. The range of work that interests BUSH gallery is broad: “BUSH gallery is performance, installation, craft, conceptual, painting, photography, stand up comedy, cooking, movie watching with trees and many other things you might call bullshit on ’cause they are not really art. But bullshit is part of BUSH gallery too” (7). BUSH gallery is interested in Indigenous languages more than popular culture or social media (7). It “works towards Indigenous resurgence,” is “expanded, not limited, by tradition,” is feminist,  “inauthentic,” “unsettled,” but most of all about the land: “BUSH gallery is on the land, researches land, goes to the land, because the land is the foundation of Indigenous life and Indigenous struggle. . . . BUSH gallery thanks the land” (7).

In their introduction to the issue, Morin and Willard are clearer about the gallery’s location: “BUSH gallery is located on the traditional territories of the Secwepemc Nation, hosted on Tania Willard’s land,” they write, although it is also “a series of on-going gatherings of like-minded folks united under questions concerning art making, land, Indigenous art history and interventions into the colonial. These gatherings focus on experimental investigations that enable the complexities of Indigenous knowing along with an active disengagement with western logic” (8). In this issue, Morin and Willard continue, they “dared to ask this question about land: does it help us to realize the depth of Indigenous art history when we make art on the reserve outside of gallery and museum systems?” (8). They see this issue as “a decolonization of the idea of an art magazine or an art review or art writing or art criticism” (8). They asked contributors to “consider the future and space-making”; to think about “the creative force of the body”; “to give voice to aesthetic experiences in their communities,” defined as on- and off-reserve and Indigenous and non-Indigenous spaces “in which they find home and cultural continuity and safety”; to decentre the city “as the place of contemporary art” and to think about “what it means for contemporary art conversations to circulate in rural or non-art spaces” (8). 

In the introduction’s last paragraph, Morin and Willard note that no contemporary art galleries or artist-run centres exist on First Nations reserves “because people have been too busy surviving” (8). They state, “we want to ask the spirits: is it a good idea to have Indigenous art galleries on a reserve or on the land? What do Indigenous artist-run centres look like on Indian land? And when they do happen on reserve land, do they just feel like artist-run centres in cities?” (8). I wonder why the Woodland Cultural Centre—not on the Six Nations reserve, admittedly, but on land owned by the Six Nations of the Grand River—is excluded here. Is it not contemporary enough?

The first article is “To Be At The Mercy Of The Sky” by poet Billy-Ray Belcourt. He’s also a photographer, I discover as I turn the page, because the article—a prose poem, I think, or a work of creative nonfiction—is illustrated with his photography. The text reflects on what’s left of the Indian Residential School in Joussard, Alberta: “what remains exceeds the infrastructural remains, we are caught up in the afterlife of captivity, cages were made out of bodies, and then bodies out of anything that was left behind” (13). He calls that physical location “this primal scene, this open wound,” a painful place to visit (13). He notes that wealthy settler cottagers spent their summers “just a few feet away from this prison house,” thinking nothing of it, bathing “in the aroma of violence” but with their senses of self remaining intact, unlike his own self, which has been “dragged through the dirt of bad social structures” and “cannot bear this kind of looking” (13). He imagines the provincial government making the ruins into a historic site, crawling “out of the bloody maw of the past, smiling with the carcasses of words like history and forgiveness hanging from their lips,” mistaking “the red on their skin for sunlight” (13). Those words remind me of our premier’s remarks after the 215 children were discovered at the former Kamloops Indian Residential School—a man who has fought every First Nations initiative as hard as he could but who sheds crocodile tears over the dead.

Belcourt is “fixed by the darkness that emanates from the doorway,” all that’s left of the school and the subject of the accompanying photograph. He writes, “it is a thick nothingness at which i feel compelled to stare. nothingness is a thing. a lot of indians live there. i don’t blame them; who needs a map when the world is labyrinthine? who needs geography when there are doorways everywhere?” (13). He writes of the dead, their desire for revenge—and that reminds me of the bodies of children in Kamloops. This entire text reminds me of them. “there is no shelter under skies like these,” Belcourt concludes. “when i was a little boy, my mooshum told me a story about the day the sky fell down. the sky is still falling, but only indians can tell the difference. i look up, and down comes an endless parade of half-smiling children” (13). 

“Refracting Bush,” by Ashok Mathur, is the second article. Mathur is a South Asian writer and visual artist and the Dean of Graduate Studies at OCAD University. He beings by telling us his text is neither an essay nor a review nor an interrogation; instead, “this is a speculation and a way of reflecting through” (16)—reflecting through, I think, the opposition between “Cube,” on the one hand—the art gallery—and “Bush” (16), but also considering “openings and opportunities that happen through what Bush might be. What Bush reaches for and pulls a muscle in doing so” (16). In fact, he begins by asking whether there actually is an “oppositional binary” between Cube and Bush (16). “We cannot speak of Bush without having in mind Cube. . . . And we cannot think of Cube without rendering its negative space as Bush,” Mathur writes (16). Actually, I think Bush is probably ignored and unthought, left out of the art world’s consideration—but that’s just my sense of things.

Mathur notes that he once had a show where he “tried to think through the project of the written novel and reimagine it as space” (16). The accompanying photographs document that work, which was exhibited at BUSH gallery—or at least reinstalled there after its initial showing. He describes it “as a palimpsest of targeted love, those self-same scrims hanging between trees and across shrubs, readable in the moonlight and rain showers and giving evidence of the novel to the land and the bugs and the animals who came across the installations” (16). He recalls a journey north to Tahtlan territory, from grassland to mountains, not climbing but rather staying near the car to look at “the clouds shadow the prints Peter [Morin] had installed on the banks” (16). He recalls projecting work onto trees (17). 

Then he turns from Bush to Cube: “Bringing dirt into the gallery is a sign of Cube critique and re-invention of the gallery, but is it Bush and what might Bush be if you brought in hardwood floors and drywall, which is what the gallery in the urban centre is if you time-travel back a few hundred years. The question is not how to differentiate, but what constitutees the difference, perspectivally and perceptually” (17).

Mathur asks if “being on Indigenous land” is “what makes Bush, Bush?” (17). What is Indigenous land, though? It goes far beyond the boundaries of reserves, doesn’t it? Is it true that “land imitates art wherever it goes” (17)? “The exterior of the Cube space, whether urban or far-flung rural has elements of Bush, even if the ground is concrete instead of humus,” he continues (17). Is that true? What then is Bush? Or is this a recognition that Indigenous land includes the places where the Cube is located?

Mathur wonders what form the earth’s art review would take: it would decentre language and move “from affect to affection” (17). Is that a way of thinking about our relationship to the land? If the land would decentre language, though, why the wordplay?

Next, Mather considers addressing injustice from a position on the land versus doing so in the city. Protests take place in the streets, but “streets are not animal paths, and what of the idea of corrective measures taken by the streams and watering holes, demands of systemic change under a clear blue sky?” (17). Here Mathur is ascribing intention and agency to the land, seeing it as a living thing.

He wonders if bringing BUSH gallery into a city “is an experiment in redecolonization or derecolonization” (17). Or can we get beyond that history of colonization? “If we cease a focus on those histories, might that reinvent a future, or does that doom us to historical repetition? Or maybe Bush, by its very iteration, already encapsulates such critiques, and yet, through oblique reference, allows a shift into new terrain,” he writes (17). 

In his conclusion, he notes that none of his remarks are solutions or directions, “but merely a struggle to complexify and re-identify where Bush might lead us, or how we might lead ourselves into a new form of roughing it in the Bush” (17). The risk is that we might overdetermine this identity and “promote a demise as we prescribe a genesis” (17). “The path of Bush, it seems, is best understood not with a spotlight but under a whispering rain,” he states, a suggestion of its subtlety, and the need for us to be subtle in attempting to apprehend it as well.

The next article is “Coney Island Baby,” by Gabrielle L’Hirondelle Hill, Amy Kazymerchyk, Chandra Melting Tallow, and Jeneen Frei Njootli. It is a conversation about a film, Coney Island Baby, that documents trapping rabbits on Gwich’in territory, and “the ideas at the heart” of that film (19). The film’s title refers to the place in New York, which was named after the many rabbits that lived there (19). “Coney” is also the root of “cunny,” from which “cunt” is derives, and so the film links trapping rabbits—“a feminized and often diminished kind of labour—to the idea of bunnies as feminized and sexualized, like ski bunnies and Playboy bunnies,” L’Hirondelle Hill states (19). She “wanted to talk about Indigenous women’s and feminized labour without essentializing or falling back on a gender binary,” she continues. “Maybe the way to put it is that when labour is feminized and racialized, it is also often devalued, no matter who does it” (19).

L’Hirondelle Hill’s uncle had a trapline in Ottawa, inside the city limits, and he taught her how to trap rabbits (19). She thought it would be interesting to set up a trapline in Vancouver, but then decided that wouldn’t be respectful, so instead the project moved to Secwepemculew, “the territory of the Secwepemc nation,” where Willard gave the team permission to trap and became part of the project (19). Njootli adds, “BUSH gallery just seemed like a natural place to return to and continue that conversation. In terms of being respectful or mindful in one’s practice, it feels right to be invited to stay in a good friend’s home and to work around their kids and family, while also being able to contribute to the labour of taking care of a family and a home” (19). Those aspects of the project were as important as snaring the rabbits, she continues: “I really like that we made an effort to film all of the work that was happening around the snaring, which are also forms of feminized labour in domestic space” (19). Kazymerchyk agrees: “BUSH is still flexible about experimenting and improvising new ways of making art and taking care of each other” (19).

Melting Tallow notes that the project allowed her to feel, in an embodied way, that she was contributing despite her disability (20). Kazymerchyk comments, “autonomous collectives like BUSH gallery have an opportunity to initiate fairer and more flexible economic and professional protocols that acknowledge those different levels of labour,” unlike other contemporary art institutions, which “have very narrow parameters around the forms of work, methods of productivity and outcomes and deliverables that are supported and commended,” parameters that disadvantage disabled people who can’t meet them (20). Justice and fairness involve “creating protocols that are flexible, and working processes that are negotiable, to be able to meet people’s individual conditions” (20). 

Rabbits are abundant and feed people,” Njootli notes, but also “they have a kind of quiet medicine. Their coats are protective and camouflage them, so unless you really pay attention, or are really present and know them, you won’t likely get to see them” (21). She suggests that is an analogy to the film and around a finished work of art: “I think it’s really fitting that we didn’t catch any rabbits during the shoot. Part of me is really glad. Not catching any is perfect because it’s made us talk more about our time together and labour and the land—more than how to respectfully depict the snaring” (21). It also led her to reflect on the meaning of success, about what it means to have a relationship with rabbits (21). L’Hirondelle Hill notes that Indigenous communities help each other be fed and healthy “through this crazy network”—another kind of unacknowledged labour (21). 

The conversation shifts to Socrates and the notion of peripatetic philosophy. L’Hirondelle Hill suggests that the 60 million refugees walking are philosophers who are not being listened to (21). That reminded the group of the way that the labour of some people—particularly disabled people—is invisible (23). Njootli agrees: “there are so many ways of participating and being deeply engaged and very present that don’t always look like ‘contributing.’ It often comes down to a question of legibility. Silence in some scenarios is read as non-participation. But sometimes there’s a kind of participation going on that has a longer duration, more depth and more strength than what’s immediately legible” (23). Coney Island Baby was in part about “ideas of legibility, like the legibility of Indigenous women, our labour and our forms of relationships,” she concludes. “But also our legibility to each other, right? And so, part of our learning has also been about how to present that in the film” (23).

Amish Morrell’s “A Feat for the Stewards of the Land: Contemporary Art and Netyukulimk on Unama’ki” is a reflection on the Feast of Stewards project, the culminating performance of Ursula Johnson’s (re)al-location, a work that waspart of LandMarks2017. (re)al-location was a process that began during a Banff residency when Johnson created a foliage patterned textile representing the present-day ecologies” of the Cape Breton Highlands,” and it “was adapted into a series of costume accessories—costumes, masks, bandannas and jumpsuits—transforming the students and others who wore them into superhero-like stewards of the Highlands” (27). Festival of Stewards was held in a campground over the course of an afternoon in a very rural area. “This provides a challenging context for the presentation and reception of contemporary art, where there are no art organizations and any potential audience is unlikely to be familiar with its language and conventions,” Morrell writes. “It does, however, offer a rich and complex site for thinking about what a critical practice might look like in relation to the systems and practices of survival that shape the reality and imagination of those who live in such places” (27). 

“In (re)al-location Johnson set out to explore the Mi’kmaq philosophy of Netukulimk, a concept that has also informed her past work in sculpture and performance,” Morrell continues. “Explained in the most basic terms, Netukulimk describes the practice of maintaining sustainable relationships to the land, taking only as much as one needs for one’s family and community. But it also encapsulates a worldview, with both sacred and practical forms of knowledge that are embedded in the land, including rules and obligations that ensure the continued regeneration of life” (27). Making a basket isn’t just making a basket: it’s an entire knowledge of the land, and the resulting basket “is an animate object, a body of lived knowledge, inseparable from the ecological and cultural context within which it is made and used” (27). Practicing Netukulimk “doesn’t merely include sustainable hunting, but re-learning its spiritual and practical significance” (27).

Festival of Stewards had a fire, performances by local musicians, food (beans and fishcakes), traditional Mi’kmaq games, and conversation (27-28). It also included collaborations with other artists from Cape Breton, who explored their connection to the land (28). Johnson’s role in the event “was that of host and organizer, introducing the performers, stoking the fire, cajoling and managing the team of volunteers and students” (28). At the end of the day, Johnson and the volunteers brought out 1,000 pieces of moose meat and grilled them on the fire (28). “It was a transgressive gesture that stood the risk of re-igniting volatile exchanges between Mi’kmaq hunters, settler communities and provincial and federal institutions such as the Department of Natural Resources and Parks Canada,” Morrell writes, alluding to the history of conflict between the Mi’kmaq hunters and those other communities and institutions, particularly in relation to hunting in the Cape Breton Highlands National Park, where the moose was killed. “These are among the continued obstacles that come into play around the practice of Netukulimk” (28).

“Both Festival of Stewards and (re)al-location explored these ideas”—of the relationship of those communities to Netukulimk—“through a complex—and at times, transgressive—social choreography,” Morrell continues. “Though it was not explicit in the publicity for Festival of Stewards, Johnson’s project engaged two difficult and contentious events centred around the Cape Breton Highlands National Park: the moose culls held in 2015 and 2016, and the expropriation of lands for the creation of the park in 1936” (28-29):

While addressing federal and provincial institutional structures that determine wildlife management and how we imagine and interact with wild spaces, (re)al-location served to recuperate the invisible structures that shape our relationship to the land: stories, practices of survival, the land and its memories. These stories and practices are not separate from contemporary life, but map a different “contemporary”—one that extends across time and memory, grounded in histories, places and forms of knowledge that survive at the peripheries of a global, neo-liberal world order. (29)

In this way, Morrell writes, “(re)al-location thus intervened within the very definitions of contemporary art, working with a vocabulary that is specific to Unama’ki and the northern Highlands, that arises from histories of survival and Mi’kmaq philosophy” (29).

The next article, Jeremy Dutcher’s “to the archive,” is a visual score in Dutcher’s language, Wolastoqiyik and English. I don’t know how to perform it, though, so I skipped ahead to “Re-centring Knowledge,” an interview with artist and curator Anique Jordan by Willard. Her work, The Public—Land and Body (West), was a video art exhibition presented at Black Creek Community Farm in Toronto. It included work by artists Yu Gu, Lisa Hirmer, Lisa Myers, Ella Cooper, and Joshua Vettivelu, and panel discussions with Cooper, Erica Violet Lee, Sabrina “Butterfly” GoPaul, and Jordan. Willard discusses that project with Jordan, who notes that Indigenous people, Black people, and other racialized groups feel uncomfortable at places like the Art Gallery of Ontario. “I feel like it’s up to artists and curators, and whomever is in the gallery world, to always be thinking about how the work that we are doing is a reflection of the experiences in the communities that we have come from,” Jordan states. “And therefore how do we give that back to them, to those spaces. I wanted to be able to do something that was not centred in the downtown core but reached out into the wings of the city, which are the places I grew up in and did all my community work in” (35). Willard agrees: the art gallery is intimidating to “people who feel like the gallery has some kind of colonial authority about it,” and says that she is “very much interested in decentring that and valuing other spaces of artistic exploration” (35). Jordan cites an idea from artist and educator Quill Christie: relationships are a core artistic practice (37). She used her aunt and her mother as a barometer: “if they can go to a space and feel a visceral response or feel like they are comfortable talking about it or finding their own meaning through it, then I feel like it’s a success” (37). I’m not sure any of my aunts and uncles would find any comfort in seeing contemporary art, and I wonder to what degree that metric would result in a different kind of work than that which Jordan values. However, she argues that having a panel discussion and involving the community in the presentation of the work was important (37). 

The gallery educators, who came from an Indigenous youth residency led by Quill, went through an orientation “where we focused on what they thought of the art—what questions, feelings, stories they felt came from it—it was then their interpretation of the work that led visitors through,” Jordan recalls:

Making sure to continue to reiterate you are a keeper of knowledge. You can make sense of this. You know things. You bring so much. Together we asked what, for you, is coming from this? What is it that makes sense to you? What would you ask of this? It was really just asking questions of each other so that they had the space to come up with their own language to speak about the artworks. That was one of the most important components to the project, one that no one would have seen. When visitors came to the site, they would be led around by one of these young people. They would be speaking, and it wouldn’t be something I told them as a script. They would be speaking from their own perspectives, from the ways they understand this artwork. This is the way I want to work. I am constantly re-centering where knowledge comes from and affirming that. (37)

That’s an interesting process. I’m often baffled by contemporary art without context provided by a curator or by the artist. I accept that bafflement: that I can’t make sense of the work, that I don’t know things, that whatever I bring to it is insufficient. Sometimes I think bafflement is the intention. Maybe I’m wrong, or thick-headed.

“One of the great things about the installation,” Jordan continues, “was how children related to the work” (37). She contrasts that installation to large cultural institutions, where children are taught to obey rules, to be silent and not to play (37). “And I thought about how when we did this program at the farm, they were taught how to be free,” she states. “How to run. How to touch things. How to eat things that they found” (37-38). She “started seeing how confining an arts institution can be. Why wouldn’t we want it to be a place of freedom? It’s not a space where you can breathe and see a horizon behind the work or feel as though you can remember there is land and communities and neighbourhoods and people surrounding it” (38). 

The artwork was in relationship with the site, the farm itself: the art and the farm informed each other (38). “I also thought about it as refusal, as a practice of refusal, where we are going to do this because we are artists and we are people in a community and this is our community space and we don’t need permission to show the work that comes from us,” Jordan continues. “Even within that I also recognized that we were able to do that because there was money backing it. Which is important because artists have to be paid and their labour has to be accounted for” (38). The freedom the exhibition created, she concludes, “was a human way to experience art” (38).

The next article, “Primary Colours: Preparing a New Generation,” by Clayton Windatt, discusses a four-day gathering in Victoria, B.C., where “Indigenous artists, black artists, artists of colour and artists of settler heritage” came together “to discuss shared histories of colonialism, race and convention in the arts” (41). “This gathering acted as a platform of investigation into exclusionary power dynamics, exploring the constructs of inclusivity, building collective memory and offering tools to those attending, who represented all generations of cultural leaders from diverse and marginalized communities locally, nationally and internationally,” Windatt continues. “Explorations of privilege, abuse, control and ways to circumvent those hazards within institutionalized models served as tools handed from one generation of cultural leaders to the next” (41).

Windatt notes that the gathering, and the accompanying exhibition Deconstructing Comfort, considered “the constructs of ‘decolonization’ and ‘indigenization’ within Canada” (41). He suggests that for a non-Indigenous person, “the act of following Indigenous modes of being can be an act of decolonization but it is not an act of indigenization, as you can never change your blood or heritage” (42). 

“Our relationships are messy and our identities are complicated but Primary Colours focuses our energies into collective actions,” Windatt concludes:

Bringing us all together allows us to find ways to empower one another through acts of collaboration and honest effort towards mutually beneficial goals for all. This also extends to those who may not consider themselves to be part of a marginalized group. Everyone needs to understand that these conversations discuss all people, and that major decisions about the climate of the arts and potential futures for Canada are taking place. (42)

The conversations, he continues, were about “the transfer of power from the existing infrastructures to new leaders” (42). I’m not sure what to think about this event or Windatt’s account of it. I will say, though, that my small experience in the art world has often involved being discounted, shamed, and rejected—despite my white skin, which might make me look like part of the “existing infrastructures” that must lose power. 

The next article, “Learning from the Land: BUSH gallery @dechintau,” is a photo essay, impossible to summarize here. The final article in the issue is Karyn Recollet’s “Kinstillatory Gathering.” I’ve read articles where she uses that term, but I haven’t been able to figure out what it means (and I’ve tried), so I’m very interested in what she has to say, but her poetic prose refuses to give me the definition I’m seeking, except to say that Indigenous languages “are kinstillatory” (51). The word seems to be a portmanteau combining “kin” and “constellation” but I’d already figured that much out. Then come reviews of exhibitions, which are a curious combination of what I would typically understand to be reviews and poetic artist statements, book reviews, and shorter articles.

There. I’ve done another assigned reading for the course I’m taking. My eyes hurt—the print on my iPad is tiny—and I’m tired. I still have to go for a walk somewhere, part of my assigned coursework, although I might need to take a break first. Don’t kid yourself: these three-week intensive courses are killers. 

Works Cited

BUSH Gallery. Conceptual and Experimental Indigenous led land-based artist rez-idency. https://www.bushgallery.ca.

C Magazine, no. 136, 2018. https://cmagazine.com/issues/136/pdf.

Plug In ICA. Summer Institute Session II: Site/ation with BUSH gallery. August 2018. https://plugin.org/exhibitions/bush-gallery/.

Toronto Biennial of Art. Bush Gallery. https://torontobiennial.org/artist-contributor/bush-gallery/.

University of British Columbia, Department of Art History, Visual Art & Theory. Jeneen Frei Njootli. https://ahva.ubc.ca/persons/jeneen-frei-njootli/.

Partners in Art, LandMarks2017: Art + Places + Perspectives

This catalogue of the LandMarks2017 is the homework assigned for this weekend by the professor in the course I’m taking this month. It begins (after greetings from funders) with a curatorial statement, co-authored by David Divney, Ariella Pahlke & Melinda Spooner, Natalia Lebedinskaia, Véronique Leblanc, Kathleen Ritter, and Tania Willard. “Landmarks are meeting places,” they begin, noting that landmarks can be natural features or part of the built environment that “define boundaries and echo multiple histories, stories and beliefs. They give shape to our collective memories. A landmark is a turning point for change and a legacy for future generations. Landmarks help us find our way. To mark is to act” (10). That statement describes the curators’ theme, the way they are defining the key term in the show.

LandMarks2017 was a network of collaborative, contemporary art projects installed in national parks on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of Confederation. “The anniversary marks an occasion to reflect on a land much older than 150 years,” the curators state, “and to address the legacies of colonialism, the complex relationship to nationhood and cultural identity, as well as our relationship to nature in the face of present-day environmental and climatic crises” (10). The show looks at art “as a catalyst for discourse and social change,” and “provides an opportunity to imagine, to speculate and to invent our futures through the eyes of aratists, art students, communities, and through the spirit of the land” (10). Given the diversity of Canada, the show spoke “from multiple positions using difference, rather than unified national identity, as a starting point,” and it recognized “Indigenous Nations and relationships to land as foundational”: “Our shared stories are, at their heart, about land, belonging, languages and cultures that stem from our interconnectedness with the earth” (10). That curatorial position is rooted in Indigenous understandings of and relationships with land.

In her introduction, curator Candice Hopkins, a member of the Carcross/Tagish First Nation, begins with the genocide of the Beothuk in what is now Newfoundland. She writes, “we know that one of the defining characteristics of the colonial frontier is its extraordinary imbalance of power and its incredible violence” (13). The history that Canada celebrates “is a distinctly settler history, borne out of the tenacity of those first non-Indigenous people who came to make their homes in these lands,” although even that history leaves out the experiences of many newcomers (13). It also, she implies, leaves out stories like the story of the Beothuk.

LandMarks2017, Hopkins continues, may have been “the largest exhibition to take place in Canada,” and for that reason, “it had the ability to engage with markedly different communities and landscapes, many of which were situated far from major urban centres,” far from the southern border where most Canadians live (13). “What does it mean to consider a nation, not only through its official narratives, but through its unofficial ones as well?” she asks. “How can an exhibition uphold those places and people whose histories and stories fly under the radar?” (13). The show “sought to make space to see beyond the celebratory acts undertaken in the country to recognize its 150th anniversary since Confederation, and mark instead those complicated and often lesser-known histories that inevitably accompany national formations,” she writes. “it did this by placing an emphasis not necessarily on people, but on the land, the water and the environment, and our relationships to it—however complicated and complicit” (13). 

LandMarks2017 brought together works by 12 artists, “many of them collaborative, process-based, ephemeral and often made with the things of nature,” and it “made space for the questioning of official narratives and deeply held personal narratives as well” (14). She suggests that Rebecca Belmore’s sculptures included in the show, Wave Sound, which represented listening devices, “posit a necessary shift in our collective consciousness”: “We are at a tipping point ecologically and environmentally,” she writes, and Wave Sound suggests the importance of listening to the sounds of the land (14). Cheryl L’Hirondelle and Camille Turner also produced “something of an auditory work” in their collaboration, Freedom Tours, which “engaged a host of collaborators on a tour boat in the waterway of Thousand Islands national Park and as a procession in Rouge National Urban Park, situated near the borderlands of Canada and the United States” (14). That project “created a platform for the sharing of stories, knowledge and songs” from Indigenous people and people who are part of the African diaspora, descendants of those who fled north during the time of slavery (14). That project asked “Whose stories are missing when we speak about land and freedom?” and “What do we do with this new-found knowledge and these new-found stories?” Hopkins states (14). 

Hopkins devotes a paragraph to Maureen Gruben’s metaphorical intervention, in which “she threaded hundreds of feet of bright red broadcloth across the ice in a precise zigzag,” where each ‘suture connected holes drilled in the ice, the kind made for thousands of years by people in the Univialuit region for fishing and sealing” (14). The work referred to the decorative trim on parkas, and was thus “a monument to women’s work, their skill and aesthetics,” skills that kept people alive in the arctic (14). 

“Other projects were subject to the ever-changing conditions of the environment,” Hopkins continues. Michael Belmore’s sculpture of copper-inlaid stones remains in Churchill, Manitoba, although it was originally intended to be installed in parks in southern Manitoba (14). The stones couldn’t be transported south because the railway to Churchill was damaged by flooding (14). 

Hopkins notes that LandMarks2017 “took place in the age of reconciliation,” which has changed this country, even if the emotional labour was carried out by Indigenous people and if Canada considers the reconciliation process concluded, rather than just begun (15). “In its deep questioning of official histories and national narratives, LandMarks did not replicate binary or reductive relationships between peoples, between settler (as one all-too-often reductive category) and Indigenous (an equally reductive category)” (15). Instead, it “demonstrated the potential of anti-colonial methodologies,” such as 

L’Hirondelle and Turner’s insistence on giving voice to birds (the winged ones) as part of their project; Rebecca Belmore’s call to listen to the water; Ursula Johnson’s ‘gift’ of an image of the Cape Breton forest, one that can be used to decorate the home; Raphaëlle De Groot’s bringing people together to learn from the land, its narratives, and Innu and settler customs in the Côte-Nord region; Jin Me Yon’s haunting image of herself, an immigrant Canadian, disappearing into a hole in the sand; Chris Clarke’s and Bo Yeung’s emphasis not on what they had made, but on their ability to create a place for the sharing of knowledge of the Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in people; Douglas Scholes’ call that we look deeply at the history of infrastructure like canals, which have radically transformed the waterways; and Jeneen Frei Njootli’s making place for the invention of tradition, though the creation of beautifully adorned blankets for the modern sled-dog, the Ski-Doo. (15)

Along with those works, the project shared knowledge and mentored younger artists and scholars. “Let’s hope that LandMarks is one template for future practices, not with regard to scale, but at least with regard to method,” Hopkins states (15).

Next, the catalogue presents descriptions and images of specific works included in LandMarks, beginning with Jeneen Frei Njootli’s short experimental film Being Skidoo, which in part, it seems, documents a trip into Vuntut National Park, a caribou calving ground co-managed by the Gwitchin First Nation. “The project profiles the art of ski-dog blankets, wherein traditionally adorned dog blankets were adapted by the artist for use on snowmobiles,” curator Tania Willard writes. “The ski-dog blankets were designed in collaboration with community members and given to elders and others as gifts, allowing the work to circulate in the artist’s home community and honouring the practice of gift-giving in Gwitchin culture” (21). So the blanket part of the project is collaborative, community art; the film, though, sets out to obscure “the colonial gaze of the landscape in Canada” through abstraction, constructing “an experience of movement, bodies and aesthetics as a journey through the land” (21). Rather than “profiling Indigenous communities through a lens of the past or as framed by the colonial experience,” Njootli’s film “presents an experience of being out on the land, an experience that speaks to Indigenous knowledge, tenacity and a land-rights-based relationship to traditional territories” (21). “The film is imbued with a continuum of tradition and relationship with the land that is opaque rather than overt; we have to look closely and with our hearts,” Willard continues. “In obscuring our gaze, Njootli asks us how we are entitled to see and how far we can see in what is offered to us” (22).

After that comes Weaving Voices, co-created by Chris Clarke and Bo Yeung, which was “a colaborative journey through Klondike National Historic sites on the traditional territory of Tr’onkëk Hwëchin,” consisting of a Truth and Reconciliation Walk and “two site-specific willow audio installations” (31). “Many hands and many hearts came together to reflect on the colonial roots of this community, and this country,” writes curator Kathleen Ritter (31). Clarke and Yeung are settlers who live in the Yukon, and in this work, they “acknowledge the deep ancestral roots of the land and reflect on the persistence of colonialism, the many privileges afforded and at what cost” (31).

The walk invited interpreters from both Parks Canada and the Dawson City Museum to speak about “the impacts of our colonial heritage as embodied in historic buildings” while leading community members through the area, “peeling back the layers of prejudice, segregation and discrimination, questioning the colonial attitudes that are still held” (31). The audio installations were the “other strand” of the project’s braid (31). One “living willow basked was planted by the Yukon River at Dänojà Zho Cultural Centre, and the other was placed in the rear of the Commissioner’s Residence” (31). Those willows were harvested, replanted, and “woven collectively with the intention to create space for Indigenous voices. Community members and visitors came to listen to Tr’onkëk Hwëchin people sharing their reflections on past, present and future relationships between settlers, the First Peoples and the land” (31). 

Stitching My Landscape, Inuvialuit artist Maureen Gruben’s large-scale work of land art, is deeply tied to memory, family and healing,” writes curator Tania Willard. “The core visual element of the installation—bolts of red material stretched across the ice—is related to a memory of Gruben’s: as her brother harvested a seal, a long, vivid, red string of fresh gut was strung out taught against the white snow” (41). The work consisted of 111 ice holes connected with red broadcloth; it stretched for nearly 1,000 feet on the frozen ocean around Ibyuq Pingo (41). A pingo is an ice-filled hill created by permafrost; they “have functioned as navigational aids and hunting lookouts for generations of Inuvialuit people” (41). This particular pingo is part of the Pingo Canadian National Landmark near Tuktoyaktuk (41). “Ibyuq Pingo is a sentient and living being in the cultural memory and daily landscape of Inuvialuit, contrasting the many Indigenous places in the Canadian landscape whose names have become superimposed by settler histories,” Willard writes. “Stitching My Landscape as an installation was viewed mainly by Inuvialuit people and drew on community assistance to come to fruition” (41). Thus is was a collaborative, community-focused project. It was documented through an experimental film (41).  It was also an example of what David Garneau calls “irreconcilable spaces of Aboriginality” (33).

“In cultural skills-based arts, the act of making something beautiful becomes about valuing what you have—the gifts and harvests from the land, and the safety and security of family and loved ones,” Willard continues. “Stitching My Landscape simultaneously evoked traditional clothing patterns, like the delta time pattern on parkas, as well as the importance of subsistence, the strength of community, and the potential for healing—and being healed by—the land” (42).

In Jin-me Yoon’s Long View, the artist, known for her introspective photography, video work and installations,  “turned her gaze outward in a year-long investigation at Pacific Rim National Park Reserve,” creating a series of staged photographs in which the artist disappears into the sand (53). In the accompanying video, the artist’s family members dig a hole into which she steps (53). Then, viewers see “a montage of flickering archival images from the near and distant past”—fragments of the entangled military, cultural, and Indigenous histories that have shaped the history of this region (53-54).

The work “also resulted in a series of community-engagement events that brought into dialogue Indigenous conceptions of land and place within the context of inherited histories of colonialism, in both Canada and Korea,” the curator, Kathleen Ritter, states (54). “Long View invites us to project our gaze alongside the artist’s, at a point on the open ocean with a speculative view across the Pacific, a place to ponder past and future relations on Indigenous lands between Canada and Asia” (54).

Following is Rebecca Belmore’s Wave Sound project, “conceived as an invitation to listen to the land,” according to curator Kathleen Ritter. “Belmore created a series of temporary sculptures that were situated in national park sites across the country—Banff national Park, Pukaskwa National Park and Gros Morne National Park—and on Chimnissing Island, home to the Beausoleil First Nation,” Ritter writes. “The sculptures functioned as listening devices and took for form of large cones—a shape that allowed them to naturally amplify ambient sound in the surrounding locations” (63). Each sculpture “conformed to the shape of the different rock surfaces found on the land,” and each was situated “on the land facing out toward the water, positioned in such a way to invite people to approach” (63). “As people engaged with the artwork, they would take time to rest, be attentive and hear the sound of the land and, especially, the water,” Ritter explains (63). The sculptures were created over the course of a year, during which Belmore visited the sites and documented the shapes of the rocks at each one (63). Then these impressions were cast in aluminum cones at a foundry (63). “The artwork encompassed both an object and an action, mobilizing individuals and communities to listen to the land as an act of respect, commemoration and understanding,” Ritter concludes. “At the root of Belmore’s inquiry is the land itself and how we envision our relationship with it” (63).

Michael Belmore’s Coalescence is described next. It was “conceived as a single sculpture in four parts,” writes curator Natalia Lebedinskaia. “Sixteen stones, ranging in weight from 300 to 1,200 pounds, are fitted together and inlaid with copper, then situated to frame the vast distance between the southernmost boundary of the Laurentide Ice Sheet, near Grasslands National Park in Saskatchewan, to one of its points of drainage into Hudson Bay in Churchill, Manitoba” (81). Places in Riding Mountain National Park and The Forks National Historic Site “punctuate the stones’ migration” (81). Those four sites “mark meeting points between water and land: ancient shorelines, trade routes and meeting places, sites of annual mass migrations of animals and forced displacement of peoples” (81). Belmore uses copper to give the stones labour and value (81). They are shaped so that they fit together perfectly, and the surfaces where they meet are covered in copper, reflecting light (81). “Each crevice is filled with a fire that will be extinguished with age, turning brown, then black, and reaching a luminous green hue as it settles into the landscape,” Lebedinskaia continues. “The sculpture is a marker of how everything comes from the ground and returns to it, and how these processes stretch far beyond human understanding of time” (81). The work is “a moment of connection between deep geological time of stone and the linear human time of labour,” a reminder of “the timelines of the land” (81). 

In response to Belmore’s installation, Leanne Zacharias’s Sounding the Wake of the Glacier is a sound work that weaves together the environments where the stones were located, “through field recordings, transcription of animal calls and musical interpretation of climatic maps of the four regions” (82).

Freedom Tours, a collaboration between Cheryl L’Hirondelle and Camille Turner, follows. It was “an intervention at and through the waters of Thousand Islands National Park and Rouge National Urban Park by land,” according to curator Tania Willard (97). The work centred Indigenous and Black “stories untold and songs unsung,” thus decentring white settler narratives (97). At Thousand Islands National Park, it began with the Haudenosaunee Thanksgiving address, the Ohen:ton Karihwatehkwen, delivered by Janice Hill; then two cruise ships carried passengers while “the artists sought to address these lesser-known histories in public with restorative interventions” (97). At Rouge National Urban Park in Toronto, the work took the form of a walking tour “that asked members of the public to stand in for, and pledge their commitment to, the different species within the park ecosystem” and “to make freedom flags and to march to celebrate the park’s varied species and diversity, as well as their own identities and political contexts” (98). Both “actions and engagements” ended in round-dances (98). 

Douglas Scholes Wander: (re)Marking, “a series of walks and interventions in the public space along 15 kilometres of the Lachine Canal National Historic Site,” was a “response to the canal’s environment, history, and current presence in the city of Montreal” (111). Scholes collaborated with writers, visual artists, sound artists, and videographers (111). According to curator Véronique Leblanc, “He approached the Lachine Canal as an entity, seen through the eyes of the character that he had created, the wanderer, and those of his contributor” (111). “In order to multiply ways to see, listen to and experience the site, Scholes endowed the canal with a necessarily plural conscience, which was left to blossom,” Leblanc continues. “His first intervention was sculptural: 100 replicas of bollards made of beeswax were placed on the site in June 2017. Their fragility embodied a posture of humility toward the territory through a dispersed, discrete and transitory presence” (111). The work also involved a musical composition, “a quadrophonic electro-acoustic piece,” an alternative tourist map, and “a series of photographs and films showing the wanderer’s activities from season to season”; those works were “presented in the public space through exhibitions, screenings, walking tours, readings and a floating concerts,” and were “collected in their most rudimentary forms (vinyl record, sheet music, flipbook and so on) in a time capsule” (111). “Allowing for the cohabitation of different temporalities, they offer multiple interpretations of invisible and inaudible phenomena of the canal, real or fictional,” Leblanc writes. “Through both their materiality and their evanescence, the works will now be propelled into the city of the future” (111).

Raphaëlle de Groot’s Subsistences, located in Mingan Archipelago National Park Reserve, follows. That project was the result of a year of “conversations with people living in the region and explorations of the area’s unique natural phenomena,” and it took the form of “a ‘bivouac-exhibition’ that stopped over in seven villages” in the area (131). That bivouac consisted of a pickup truck and an Innu tent (131). In each community, de Groot “asked people to share their experience of the territory—defined as the Mingan Archipelago—the sea, or the land of forest and bog” (131). A film made of the journey “reveals relationships that de Groot created among the different elements, as well as stories, objects and images that she gathered over time” (131). The film thus “sketches out a documentary and a poetic path leading to the essential challenges of living in the region: exploitation of its resources, the cohabitation of Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities, the impact of human activity on the environment and the transmission of cultures and practices” (131).

(re)al-location, by Ursula Johnson, located in Cape Breton Highlands National Park, “engaged in the Mi’kmaw philosophy of Netukulimk, or self-sustainability, in a shared examination of the natural and cultural ecologies” of the park’s past, present, and future, the co-curators, David Diviney, Ariella Pahlke and Melinda Spooner, tell us (147). The work “reflected upon the memory that the forest carries of interaction between species, and interaction between people” (147). “Through community engagement and self-directed research, Johnson sought to make visible the links between the park, its natural resources and the people living in the surrounding area,” the co-curators write (147). Johnson photographed the forest over a year, exploring its seasonal changes, and engaged in “several interactive forums that promoted a more sustainable relationship with the environment and one another” (147). “The resulting dialogue and photo documentation led to the design of a camouflage pattern—a gift to the community—based upon the unique forest ecosystem of the Cape Breton Highlands,” the co-curators state (147). Garments made with this pattern were worn “during a participatory performance event in the form of a celebratory feast at MacIntosh Brook titled The Festival of Stewards. In this context, the wearing of the clothing served as a physical embodiment of the artwork, as did the eating of food. In sharing a meal, a commonality was reignited and interpersonal connections emerged” (147). The Festival of Stewards was a collaboration with students from a local school (148). “By working in conversation with, and across, diverse communities, Johnson aimed to (re)locate local knowledge and traditions to collectively address concerns related to the stewardship of the land. Thus, (re)al-location can be looked at as a catalyst for discourse and social change,” the co-curators conclude (148).

In “Pedagogies of the Land,” Vladimir Spicanovic, the project’s lead advisor of curriculum and curatorial engagement, cites familiar names: David Garneau; Miwon Kwon; McCoy, Tuck, and McKenzie; and Eve Tuck and K. Wayne Yang. He also notes that university and college courses came out of the activity—an interesting (and perhaps unusual) outcome. Those courses are described in detail over the following pages. One of those courses, taught by Megan Smith, happened at the University of Regina (183). Some of those courses commissioned professional artists to make work as well. 

In “Epilogue: On Land and Time,” the curatorial team reflects on the event. They note that recalling 150 and more years of complex, contested history “is not simple. It is layered, complex, political, celebratory, empowering, contradictory and visionary all at once” (232). “It is not just artists making objects,” they continue. “It is collaborative and active, requiring dialogue, shared conversation and a deeper investment to explore the relationship with, and interconnectedness to, the land, Indigenous territories and diverse communities and cultures (232). They note that, collectively, they decided “to take a lead from Indigenous epistemologies, in which time is deep, land is central and rights are unresolved” and to “witness lesser-known stories and non-linear histories that connect us more strongly to the land and its multiplicity of voices” (232). The projects of LandMarks2017 

propose intersections between bodies and territories, whether through the works themselves or by the artists being in or becoming the land. They draw on personal and familial histories as a valid way to think about the intersection of disparate identities. They inhabit the land, initiate movements and seek a coexistence of different temporalities. They care for and nurture sites on both concrete and symbolic levels. They consider nature as an interlocutor—the water, the plants and the animals (the winged and the swimmers). They allow for a sensorial experience of the land. They are presented to us in ways that are collaborative rather than singular, ephemeral rather than monumental, and process-driven rather than predetermined. They act as markers for the need for humility before nature and communities, and a consciousness of the circumstantial and partisan writings of history that can be challenged by many forms of social engagement. Discrete, subversive, accessible and thoughtful, the resulting works are extremely rich in the ways they come together conceptually, thematically and aesthetically. (232-33)

The curatorial team concludes with questions raised by the project, which include “What can we learn from the blood of a caribou on the ancient rocks of an ancient river?” and “What do we owe for our experiences within Indigenous lands and diverse communities?” (233). These are important questions for which answers are difficult and elusive. “Rather than concrete answers, what remains most important is that we centre our connection to the land, its veins—rivers and tributaries—its breath—the winds—our bodies and our waters,” they state. “Through this exchange, we can begin to re-examine our relationship with the land and with one another” (233).

This summary misses the many photographs, mostly (but I don’t think entirely) made by the project’s photographer, Kyra Kordoski. Those photographs are the point of the catalogue, of course; they are a more visceral form of documentation than the words I’ve summarized and quoted here. I have to admit that I was somewhat surprised at the predominance of social or relational aesthetics in the work included in the event, and in its pedagogical focus (which is, perhaps, another format in which relational aesthetics takes shape). I wonder if that’s the case throughout the art world now—if what was perhaps a marginal activity 30 years ago is now at the centre. What does that mean? Will relational aesthetics end up being itself decentred in favour of work that isn’t collaborative, that focuses on objects? Eventually, I suppose, that’s bound to happen. The wheel turns. In the mean time, I will have to get past the scars left by all those collaborative projects in school, the ones my students complain about, the ones where a small group does all the work while the others sit by and do nothing, the ones where everyone shares the outcome regardless of their effort or engagement, or where bullies demand an A—or else. Oh, I hated that. I’d rather work by myself. But in the contemporary art world, collaboration is everywhere and everything. Sigh. 

Aside from that complaint, I also found it interesting that the project centred Indigenous ideas about land. To what extent can settlers engage in that kind of work without being accused of cultural appropriation? That’s always a question for me—mostly because I’ve been told that my walking practice appropriates Indigenous culture and land. So I’m cautious, at best. I might find that settler theoretical frameworks will end up being easier to manage for my project, if only to avoid that kind of accusation. And yet, I think that Métis anthropologist Zoe Todd’s suggestion that those theories refuse to engage with Indigenous thinking that goes further and pre-existed the Ontological Turn is probably correct. What to do, then? Engage—at least theoretically—with Indigenous thinkers and be accused of cultural appropriation? Or ignore those thinkers and, well, remain ignorant? There’s nothing like a Catch-22, is there?

Works Cited

Garneau, David. “Imaginary Spaces of Conciliation and Reconciliation.” West Coast Line, no. 74, 2012, pp. 28-38.

Partners in Art. LandMarks2017: Art + Places+ Perspectives,Magenta Foundation, 2018. https://partnersinart.ca/projects/landmarks2017-reperes2017/.

Todd, Zoe. “An Indigenous Feminist’s Take On The Ontological Turn: ‘Ontology’ Is Just Another Word For Colonialism.” Journal of Historical Sociology, vol. 29, no. 1, 2016, 4-22. DOI: 10.1111/johs.12124