|
Mr. He finds it rather funny to illegally enter the country along the Yukon border. Some passages in this book are beautifully written. Lopez adores Peary, but saves more than a few paragraphs for how ignorant and short sighted Canadians are, while most of the time ignoring that it could be a country at all. It was my impression such comedy was not entertained along the southern border of the authors' country.This book might better be titled "American Dreams of Mystical Eskimos." I will agree there's not much of an arc to the whole thing and if you wanted to you could skip about the middle third and not miss much other than some encyclopedic goings on.The author also feels the need to mystify "Eskimos." I understand he was truly impressed with some of these people, but his belief that "Eskimos" have some sort of genetic ability to estimate torsion, torque curves and whatever out of a bunch of rocks and bones is laughable at best. By devoting a couple of lines to issues of alcohol and violence in these communities the author neglects a very serious and pressing issue for these Arctic people.As well, if you're Canadian, you should be prepared for a book-long undertone of pro-American flag waving propaganda.
There's no doubt the author has a deep connection and commitment to the land. Based on a number of trips to the far north, this is a open-minded book filled with wonderment at the often cruel beauty of the Arctic.
The nutrients that are produced by the algae living on sea ice make their way around the world in the movements of animals and ocean currents. They spend spring and summer feasting on pollen, insects, algae, or other creatures that live on these seasonal resources. The ice changes in physical properties depending on the salt content of the water, how long it has been frozen, and many other factors that all affect the plants, animals, and people that are part of the arctic landscape. They may depend on this bounty for nesting and raising young, or in other cases they may use the arctic as a feeding station for long migrations.
Before reading Arctic Dreams I thought I had some sort of a clue about what the Arctic was like: land of the midnight sun, aurora borealis, tundra and permafrost, long dark winters. The result of this failure to change resulted in repeated large scale tragedies--with hundreds of men lost, frostbitten, suffering from starvation, and sometimes even cannibalism.* Lopez also explores ground relating to the history of the "discovery" of the Western Hemisphere. Most animals that depend on the arctic are transitory visitors. Of this food chain Lopez states "The algae at the bottom of this food web are called "epontic" algae, the algae of the sea ice." He goes on to say that, "It is the ice. I first read about Europeans fishing along Eastern North America's coast line before North America's "discovery" in "Cape Cod," by Henry David Thoreau. This is also reflected in Arctic Dreams, where Lopez discusses the failure of Arctic explorers to adapt and learn from Native people.
I was a little horrified that he knew better, yet chose to promote this term. The history, archeology, cultures, ecosystems, land and ice forms are all much more complex than most are likely to imagine.Ice itself is infinitely complex. These migrating animals tie the arctic food web to the landscapes and food chains that many of us inhabit and depend on. However, he lingers longer and deepens our understanding. I do highly recommend this book, just keep in mind that the author considers himself white, and it shows.~~~~~For permission to post or publish outside Facebook or Amazon.com please contact me at: harvest95546@yahoo.com All my reviews are available--with permission--to post or publish on other sites or in print based publications. This is my first book by Barry Lopez, but it won't be my last.
I found some of the information I have been introduced to in other books strengthened and deepened with this reading. Lopez also explains that only the European elite class was considered capable of making "discoveries." Peasant fisherman, wanderers, or early settlers were expected to get out of the way so the elite could have their way--some things just don't seem to change. The arctic food chain actually depends on ice. Lopez covers this subject, and may even use the same documentation as Thoreau. The arctic is reflected back to us from indigenous inhabitants, explorers, and those who plunder resources. Over 400 pages later I have a lot more information, and I now understand that I don't really have a clue. We are treated to first hand stories about musk ox and polar bear, as well as the results of scientific studies that look into these and other arctic creatures. ** Arctic Dreams is beautiful written.
During these events, land that is normally beyond our view becomes visible. The ice crystals in the northern atmosphere, at times, create reflections of land masses that are below the horizon. The prose sings, illuminates, and educates. He knew the people--with whom he camped, ate, and hunted, and that he also called "friend"--would be offended. In these notes he explains that the people do not like to be called Eskimos. However, this seems to be a something we should all be concerned about.Anyone who is interested in understanding the planet, and our history as social and political creatures, will appreciate this book. The collision between these forces has a huge bearing on the arctic, and perhaps, on all of us."Arctic Dreams, Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape," by Barry Lopez, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1986~~~~~~* When you're ready to change--both for yourself and the planet--see my book "Food Security & Sustainability for the Times Ahead".** You will find reviews of "Collapse" and "Cape Cod" in my Facebook notes as well as on Amazon.com.~~~~~Note to Native readers: Barry Lopez calls all far north indigenous people "Eskimos." I thought this was a little odd, until I read the end notes (after I had read the rest of the text). There are various kinds of sea ice, glacial ice, ice lenses in the soil, frozen soil, land ice, ice that forms shelves between land and sea.
Northern mariners, of all nationalities, have utilized these phenomena to find "new" land and fishing grounds. In "Collapse, How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed" the author, Jared Diamond, discusses our ability to change and adapt as key to our survival. that holds this life together." While Lopez does not make a strong case for the effects that the arctic food chain has on the entire planet, it does not take a great leap to come to this understanding. Lopez doesn't dwell on climate change or the melting of the arctic.
You will find that this is a book to read and re-read, and keep close to hand. There is also some very interesting comment in relation to the Global Warming debate, which might surprise - or not. This is a beautifully written book, which has become my favorite mid-night reader, when I can't sleep. Descriptions of everything Arctic, from Alaska, across Northern Canada, and the huge islands in the Arctic Ocean, to Greenland, covering, so easily, the weather, seasons, animal, bird and fish life, with their migration and breeding, as well as human existence, and stories of Eurpean discovery and disaster, in times gone by.
13). And, confronted by an unknown landscape, what happens to our sense of wealth. He find that the Arctic is "rich with metaphor, with adumbration" (p. In the end Lopez thinks that the land is like poetry, "it is inexplicably coherent, it is transcendent in its meaning, and it has the power to elevate a consideration of human life" (p. There are three themes at the center of his narrative: "the influence of the arctic landscape on the human imagination. Barry Lopez's "Arctic Dreams" is a fascinating personal essay on the place of the North Pole in the human imagination.
xxviii). What does it mean to grow rich." (p. He observes that "it is possible to live wisely on the land, and to live well. How a desire to put a landscape to use shapes our evaluation of it. 274).This is a wonderfully evocative set of observations about Arctic and its place in the "Weltanschauung" of Western Civilization. And in behaving respectfully toward all that the land contains, it is possible to imagine a stifling ignorance falling away from us" (p.
xxix).
|