Ah, the crackle of the annual campfire for University of Michigan School for Environment and Sustainability (UMSEAS). Gorgeous fall foliage rings the little lake at the heart of the small Saginaw Forest on the edge of Ann Arbor, as students, faculty, alumnae, and others gather to let the games begin. But what may be fun for some is uncomfortable for others. Where are we with change in the competitive outdoorsy culture of mainstream environmentalism?
Photo of 2012 SNRE campfire by Dave Brenner
One of my first years at the Campfire my relay team won the wader race. We took turns putting on a pair of rubber wading pants with built in boots to waddle through the woods then into the lake. Once in up to his or her ribs, each team member in turn flails around a floating buoy, clambers back up on the slippery bank, runs back through the woods, and flops hastily down on the ground, legs in the air like an infant on a changing table, while teammates wrestle the waders off one body and wriggle it onto the next team member for their sprint.
(Photos
of the wader race from the 2012 SNRE campfire by Heather Lutz
Lesczynski; photo of the wader race team from the 2008 SNRE campfire by
Jennifer Johnson)
Established over a century ago as a
Forestry School, in intervening years its mandate has broadened. The SEAS students and graduates enjoying contemporary campfire rituals are less likely than their neighbors at other Michigan schools, or even than their predecessors our own school, to
have engaged in “dirt forestry” (or the actual technical practices of
measuring, selecting and monitoring cutting of trees within forest swathes). Instead, their core curriculum emphasizes remote sensing, policy
analysis, economic assessment tools, international regimes, and negotiation and
conflict resolution skills. The Environmental Justice
Program privileges social activism and analysis within communities in polluted
urban settings or rural areas where people have been alienated from land or
displaced altogether. The Erb dual degree program confers both a Masters in
Environmental Science and a Masters in Business Administration, for students
working to integrate environmentally sound practices within dominant business
processes across a wide range of sectors. The Landscape Architecture Program
focuses on the design and use of both public and private spaces, integrating
concerns about the built environment with those about natural systems.
The Sustainable Systems track offers an interface with engineering and
trains students for innovation in green design of buildings, appliances, and
energy systems, and the Sustainability and Development track has a global focus on scaling practices for equitable climate adaptive, poverty reducing, health promoting interventions.
So who are we, today, gathered around the campfire, gearing up for the annual log-sawing competition? And who is missing? Our graduate training does confer a
“professional skills set,” one far more heterogeneous than the kind business
schools tend to offer. Yet there are still no systematic “cases” written by students and
faculty of environment schools, providing fodder for benchmarking, strategy,
and emerging standards for organizational accountability or corporate social
responsibility. Many of our grads are out there navigating
the divides between federal agency, NGO, community and corporate sectors in environmental
fields.
Some within these new ranks of "environmental experts" also face a gulf between field personnel and home office staff within professional organizations that span sites and countries. The intimacies of direct physical engagement with ecosystems have come to characterize a (hard) core of field conservation researchers who track and trap animals or spend time with communities of hunters, herders, farmers, and traders. This group of practitioners, while they may need to know how to use powerpoint or write a grant proposal, must often also master accurate use of GPS devices, chain saws for road maintenance, or even rifles. Their field skills are constantly evolving, even as the institutional cultures and political economies of international conservation organizations come to more closely resemble commercial sectors, and many career trajectories entail early fieldwork, with later program leadership within major metropoles, in a transition that mimics that of many colonial explorers who later become administrators, moving "from boots to suits."
Some within these new ranks of "environmental experts" also face a gulf between field personnel and home office staff within professional organizations that span sites and countries. The intimacies of direct physical engagement with ecosystems have come to characterize a (hard) core of field conservation researchers who track and trap animals or spend time with communities of hunters, herders, farmers, and traders. This group of practitioners, while they may need to know how to use powerpoint or write a grant proposal, must often also master accurate use of GPS devices, chain saws for road maintenance, or even rifles. Their field skills are constantly evolving, even as the institutional cultures and political economies of international conservation organizations come to more closely resemble commercial sectors, and many career trajectories entail early fieldwork, with later program leadership within major metropoles, in a transition that mimics that of many colonial explorers who later become administrators, moving "from boots to suits."
All of that is to say, that such changes come slowly, in increments, and many ironies. And we academics are not immune. Not unlike conservationists, many
anthropologists move from the muddy boots of early career fieldwork to…well,
not suits; often to more stylish boots. We, too, venerate the lone fieldworker,
and elevate him or her to iconic status. In reflecting on the contradictions
inherent in my own career, the figure of Paul Bunyan haunts me. Sure,
environmental professionals can be a rather macho lot; but of course they too fall prey to the human desires for gigantic
figures that embody the challenges forests, wilderness, and the jungle of technological innovations pose to human
perspectives? What if the Great White Hunter (or anti-hunter, or logger, or
miner) remains in our psyche not despite, but rather due to, rapid technological change? Transformations in the ways we tame nature outpace the evolution of our imaginations. They leave us in love with cultural anachronisms that embody the
menace of natural systems and the rivalries among humans competing to make them into commodities.
Or perhaps that is too pessimistic. Watching the sawing
competition over several years of SEAS campfires, I realize that I might be misunderstanding the nuances of physical rivalries at the heart of our institutional culture. Much
is going on underneath the surface: “Short strokes at first, then long, long, long, then short towards the end…” whispered one contestant to his partner, as they watched other teams and prepared themselves to take up the saw. The comment was partly instructional and partly descriptive; they were watching a team with a diminutive woman outdo the time of a previous team of strapping, muscular men, by virtue of fine-tuned coordination between the two partners. The ritual of the crosscut saw contest is itself a moving target; it has come to reflect new forms of competition as the composition of SNRE students and faculty has changed over the years; it has never been only about brute strength, but also about syncopation; communication. Could it be that some lumberjacks are better at collaborative work than some successful, progressive anthropologists?
In arenas beyond the academic world, core forestry skills still anchor annual community festivals and themed attractions. Paul Bunyan Land, in Minnesota, combines rides and events to honor his legacy. An annual "timber sports" event pits teams and individuals from across the U.S. against one another in events that range from competitive chainsawing to log tosses and tree chopping with an axe. Oscoda Michigan's annual Paul Bunyan Days include a classic antique car show, children's activities, a Lumberjack Show and a crowd-awing Chainsaw Carving Championship with participants coming from across the nation.”
Nor are such characters as Paul Bunyan unique to North America. Mitsuo Yanagimachi's 1987 Japanese film "Fire Festival" follows the decline of an island-based forester who is domineering personality; a skilled hunter and womanizer, prone to pursuing bloodsport through his hunting dogs, he is a complex and unlikeable central character. In the end, he stands accused of sabotaging new marine conservation and tourism development efforts on his island home near Osaka. Without giving away the film's startling end, we can say that he ceases his efforts to stave off new economies of forest use in which his towering physique and enormous ego would be less relevant. In this still from the film, below, he stands naked before a Shinto temple, communing with Gods of the Forest like something of a God himself. |
The Frozen Logger
…I had a logger lover, There’s none like him today
If
you poured whiskey on it, He’d eat a bale of hay
He
never shaved a whisker, From off his horny hide
But
he drove them in with a hammer, And bit them off inside
My logger came to see me, ’Twas on a freezing day
He
held me in a fond embrace, That broke three vertebrae
He
kissed me when we parted, So hard he broke my jaw
And
I couldn’t speak to tell him, He’d forgot his mackinaw
And so I watched my lover, Go sauntering though the snow
A
going gaily homeward, At forty-eight below…
It
froze clear down to China, It froze to the stars above
At
a thousand degrees below zero, It froze my logger love
They tried in vain to thaw him, And if you’ll believe me sir
They
turned him into axe blades, To chop the Douglas fir
Anthropologist Beth Povinelli, in her 2006 book The Empire
of Love, notes that where there are Heroes and Ogres
one does well to watch also for Fairies, who embody different relationships of
risk and mystery, not only virility and competitive mastery but also queer,
subversive encounters with human limits (or the limits of what we understand
and normalize as the human). Yet in new economies of corporate
environmentalism, the dichotomies of opinion leave little room for such
nuances. NGO staff and media professionals in my own travels through Africanist conservation, celebrate conservation icons as
Heroes, even as activists and academics (ahem) castigate them as postcolonial
personalities. All of this proceeds as if more playful, nuanced, and
differently historically-rooted metaphors were irrelevant.
And perhaps they are, for the logics of
virility and competition still have a way of suffusing our social interactions.
Two years ago, as I sat on a hay bale near the SNRE campfire, I overheard a set
of exchanges from first year students sitting behind me. They were clearly
trading tales of their summer adventures camping in Yellowstone and other
famous national parks…”but did you do the sky trail?” (sheepishly) “Naw, man,
by that time we were so beat we just sat in the campsite.” (rebounding) “but we
did get stuck on the way into the park behind a herd of buffalo, so we were
late getting to camp.” Such good-natured exchanges are not only about
“on-the-groundsmanship,” but also about one-upmanship; they are conversational
contests that establish a kind of "tree-cred."
When I turned around I noted a silent
member of their circle, who shifted uncomfortably from foot to foot. He was the
only one in the group not bragging about having “bagged peaks” on his summer
trek. I asked his name, and he said he was Steve, a dual MES/MBA student who
had decided against the wine mixer hosted by the business school that night to
join instead the NRE campfire. “I feel more comfortable here,” he explained.
“Even though I know none of these guys think I’m a real, ‘hardcore’
environmentalist because I’m in business school." Fitting in as a differently academic, differently abled, or just African American student in the SEAS community is still harder work than it should be.
Revisionist history, new ecology, and reflexive anthropology have undone anachronistic notions of forests as virgin, or their inhabitants as either noble or savage. But our dominant cultures still idealize the outdoors as an arena for physical exploits rather than healing and connection, perpetuating ableism. We cannot see the inherent, alienating qualities in our lodges, log cabins and docks on a lake, icons of white recreational culture in a North America still reeling from its recent colonial, settler and owning class violences against non white Americans. We critique business as tainted, and consider environmentalism as pure, perpetuating tensions between those sectors, despite startlingly similar rivalries within them.
Revisionist history, new ecology, and reflexive anthropology have undone anachronistic notions of forests as virgin, or their inhabitants as either noble or savage. But our dominant cultures still idealize the outdoors as an arena for physical exploits rather than healing and connection, perpetuating ableism. We cannot see the inherent, alienating qualities in our lodges, log cabins and docks on a lake, icons of white recreational culture in a North America still reeling from its recent colonial, settler and owning class violences against non white Americans. We critique business as tainted, and consider environmentalism as pure, perpetuating tensions between those sectors, despite startlingly similar rivalries within them.
After all, this is Michigan, whose gleaming architectural monuments to the modern pursuits of medicine, dentistry, and engineering sit side by side with the vast stadium that may be the ultimate emblem of our preferences for primordial pastimes. After all these thousands of years, people still love a massive arena filled with a screaming crowd that
watches helmeted combatants, below. Within our relentlessly adapting institutions of higher education, we still love to pit individuals or teams against a
single slippery slope or tree, anchoring hierarchies of old school skill even within increasingly diverse communities of advanced collaborative knowledge and
action. And maybe it is true: those muddy boots moments help to extend and invigorate these new communities, rather than merely policing the boundaries of their membership in so many of the same old ways. But we as environmentalists must work hard on how our own Fire Festivals can better reach for reconciliation among our different constituencies, and call forth the new, too.
References Cited (and deepest thanks to Gayle Rubin for her close reading of a draft over Zing's grits and chicken livers one rainy Ann Arbor weekend morning)
Poffenberger, Mark. 1997. Rethinking Indonesian Forest Policy: Beyond the Timber Barons. Asian Survey 37: 453-469
Povinelli, Beth. 2006. The Empire of Love: Toward a Theory of Intimacy, Geneology, and Carnality. Durham and London: Duke University Press.
Poffenberger, Mark. 1997. Rethinking Indonesian Forest Policy: Beyond the Timber Barons. Asian Survey 37: 453-469
Povinelli, Beth. 2006. The Empire of Love: Toward a Theory of Intimacy, Geneology, and Carnality. Durham and London: Duke University Press.