Tuesday, August 16, 2022

Wendell Berry on Delight

 ...as a Force of Resistance to Consumerism, the Key to Mirth Under Hardship, and the Measure of a Rich Life

"I have always had a quarrel with this country not only about race but about the standards by which it appears to live," James Baldwin told Margaret Mead as they sat down together to reimagine democracy for a post-consumerist world. A generation later, the poet, farmer, and ecological steward Wendell Berry — a poet in the largest Baldwinian sense — picked up the time-escalated quarrel in his slim, large-spirited book The Hidden Wound (public library) to offer, without looking away from its scarring realities, a healing and conciliatory direction of resistance to a culture in which our enjoyment of life is taken from us by the not-enoughness at the hollow heart of consumerism, only to be sold back to us at the price of the latest product, and sold in discriminating proportion along lines of stark income inequality... (continues)
Maria Popova

And see

Bloom: The Evolution of Life on Earth and the Birth of Ecology
How flowers gave rise to life on Earth and made possible the human consciousness that came to see a world “thronged only with Music.”
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I love what Wendell said here in December 2016, at around the 44-minute mark, about hope and happiness.


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Berry: “In order to make ecological good sense for the planet, you must make ecological good sense locally. You can’t act locally by thinking globally.” What makes sense for Port Royal, Kentucky, may not make sense for Abilene, Texas, much less Manhattan, Nairobi or Beirut. One size does not fit all, and one knows the size that fits only if one knows what one is measuring, up close and in detail. "When Losing Is Likely-Wendell Berry’s conservative radicalism"-The Point

More on WB at aldaily...

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