from Mendota Dakota Community |
Yet, the setting of that relationship was, in the evolution of humankind, a surround of living plants, rich in texture, smell and motion. The unfiltered, unpolluted air, the flicker of wild birds, real sunshine and rain, mud to be tasted and tree bark to grasp, the sounds of wind and water, the calls of animals and insects as well as human voices--all these are not vague and pleasant amenities for the infant, but the stuff out of which its second grounding, even while in its mother's arms, has begun.
The outdoors is also in some sense another inside, a kind of enlivenment of that fetal landscape which is not so constant as once supposed. The surroundings are also that-which-will-be-swallowed, internalized, incorporated as the self."
Paul Shepard
Nature and Madness
pp. 6-7
No comments:
Post a Comment