Sunday, December 4, 2011

This used to be a blog, now it's a ghost town

It recently dawned on me that my life is currently mimicking a few of the broader structural trends within U.S. agriculture over the past 50 years or so.  That is to say that in a small-scale, anecdotal, hokey kind of way, when you close up the farm and move to the city to pursue a graduate degree, you in turn are mirroring - and adding to - the continued loss of farms, trends of young farmer attrition, and more broadly contributing to the rural brain drain that for decades has precipitated the cultural and economic collapse of rural america.  The consolidation of agricultural lands onto increasingly fewer and larger farms due to an aging farmer population that has no options of generational transfer - because the kids all moved to urban, semi-urban and peri-urban areas in the pursuit of jobs and materialistic comforts and haven't the ambitions of eking out an existence as their parents did and do - is just one spike on the morning star being used to beat the life out of a sustainable agricultural future.

Then think about the politics of it all, the terribly illogical inconsistency between what our government recommends we eat and what they encourage farmer's to grow, the revolving door between large agricultural businesses, government and lobbying interlocutors, and an ever-growing cultural malaise directed by oft-misguided priorities.  Add to this a venerable russian nesting doll of causes and effects, some smoke, mirrors, and red herrings, and an impotent political structure run by people that lack the benevolence, ethics, and all too often intelligence necessary for governing, and you can start to assemble a lens through which to view the pressing needs for change.

I really can't go on, but thought I would break some of the silence recently embracing this corner of the inter-web.

A final note to anyone paying attention: everything above is an overwhelming oversimplification, replete with any actual justifications, data, or actual literary cohesiveness, but I'll save that for graded work.

And a poem by Wendell Berry:

The Farmer among the Tombs


I am oppressed by all the room taken up by the dead,
their headstones standing shoulder to shoulder,
the bones imprisoned under them.
Plow up the graveyards! Haul off the monuments!
Pry open the vaults and the coffins
so the dead may nourish their graves 
and go free, their acres traversed all summer
by crop rows and cattle and foraging bees.
_____________________________________________
Additional, final note: anyone interested in pursuing a project to plant orchards on graveyards (I read somewhere that the roots will follow the bones of subterranean skeletons leaving the buried memorialized in a wooden cast of sorts, pretty cool), or more broadly an Initiative for Rural Weirding (although I suppose the previous call to interest could fit comfortably within the structure of this second)?  I say this in half-jest.

7 comments:

  1. Rural Weirding sounds fantastic.

    Good to hear some noies in these parts.

    -AD

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  2. Thanks. Hope all is well my friend. I've been following your blog - keep up the good work. I particularly liked the right-libertarian conundrum post, which - with the clearly laid out definition of both left and right libertarianism - provided me with an -ism for which to more closely associate my own personal political philosophy (on a certain level anyways).

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  3. Best of luck Bill with your next life project. I've enjoyed the blog and always good to get a Wendell Berry reminder

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  4. Preach on brother! I'm finding myself missing the rural life a little bit here in semi-suburban Asheville too. But we're doing our best to rip up the rental lawn for planting and take on other more indoor/urban projects (building furniture from pallets, for example) until we can move onto some land to call our own.

    In other news, it's beautiful down here. If you guys are ever looking for a warm, southern vacation you're always welcome!

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  5. Good to hear from you Mike. I meant to tell you a friend of mine is moving to Asheville in January. I'll have to get you all in touch with each other. Hope all is well.

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  6. Bill, I must have missed the first posting of this but saw it on Facebook the other day...I think it's an interesting although open-ended point you've proffered. So, what does this mean (if anything) for your current or post-graduate work? Back to the farm? Off to a new farm? Guerrilla farm warfare?

    Curious to hear a follow-up now that you've made it past your first round of finals, a head injury and the Holidays.

    And to Mike, I just so happen to be Bill's friend who moved to Asheville. We just got here last weekend and are getting our place setup, too...although it's a little more on the rural side up here by the UNC Asheville campus. I'll have Bill make the connect.

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