Stories of Snow and Fire: The Importance of Narrative to a Critically Pluralistic Environmental Aesthetic

Written narratives enable humans to appreciate the natural world in aesthetic terms. Firstly, narratives can galvanize for the reader a sense for another person’s experience of nature through the aesthetic representation of that experience in language. Secondly, narratives can encode and document fo...

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Main Author: John Charles Ryan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-03-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/2/1/99
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spelling doaj-80b780de12184d09a45d0d4aab5869252020-11-24T22:15:17ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872013-03-01219911810.3390/h2010099Stories of Snow and Fire: The Importance of Narrative to a Critically Pluralistic Environmental AestheticJohn Charles RyanWritten narratives enable humans to appreciate the natural world in aesthetic terms. Firstly, narratives can galvanize for the reader a sense for another person’s experience of nature through the aesthetic representation of that experience in language. Secondly, narratives can encode and document for the human appreciator as writer an experience of nature in aesthetic terms. Through different narrative lenses, the compelling qualities of environments can be crystallized for both the reader (who vicariously experiences nature through language) and the human appreciator (who directly experiences nature through the senses). However, according to philosopher Allen Carlson’s “natural environmental model” of landscape aesthetics, science provides the definitive narrative that represents nature on its own terms and catalyzes appropriate appreciation. In this article, I examine Carlson’s claim and argue for an environmental aesthetic philosophy of narrative multiplicity. Such a model would draw from scientific, indigenous, and journalistic narrative modes toward a critically pluralistic environmental aesthetic of the natural world. The ethical framework I propose—the function of which I characterize simply as narrative “cross-checking”—acknowledges the value of narrative heterogeneity in expressing and generating aesthetic experience of environments. This article’s thesis is forwarded through extensive treatment of these three narratives expressed within two examples, one of geographical place and one of environmental practice. As I will suggest, Denali, the prominent Alaskan mountain, can be aesthetically appreciated through the diverse narratives enumerated above. As a second case study, the traditional burning regimes of indigenous peoples reveal collectively how a critically pluralistic environmental aesthetic of narratives can be applied to—and identified to exist within—ecocultural practices, such as firing the landscape.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/2/1/99narrativesecologyenvironmental aestheticsDenalitraditional burning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John Charles Ryan
spellingShingle John Charles Ryan
Stories of Snow and Fire: The Importance of Narrative to a Critically Pluralistic Environmental Aesthetic
Humanities
narratives
ecology
environmental aesthetics
Denali
traditional burning
author_facet John Charles Ryan
author_sort John Charles Ryan
title Stories of Snow and Fire: The Importance of Narrative to a Critically Pluralistic Environmental Aesthetic
title_short Stories of Snow and Fire: The Importance of Narrative to a Critically Pluralistic Environmental Aesthetic
title_full Stories of Snow and Fire: The Importance of Narrative to a Critically Pluralistic Environmental Aesthetic
title_fullStr Stories of Snow and Fire: The Importance of Narrative to a Critically Pluralistic Environmental Aesthetic
title_full_unstemmed Stories of Snow and Fire: The Importance of Narrative to a Critically Pluralistic Environmental Aesthetic
title_sort stories of snow and fire: the importance of narrative to a critically pluralistic environmental aesthetic
publisher MDPI AG
series Humanities
issn 2076-0787
publishDate 2013-03-01
description Written narratives enable humans to appreciate the natural world in aesthetic terms. Firstly, narratives can galvanize for the reader a sense for another person’s experience of nature through the aesthetic representation of that experience in language. Secondly, narratives can encode and document for the human appreciator as writer an experience of nature in aesthetic terms. Through different narrative lenses, the compelling qualities of environments can be crystallized for both the reader (who vicariously experiences nature through language) and the human appreciator (who directly experiences nature through the senses). However, according to philosopher Allen Carlson’s “natural environmental model” of landscape aesthetics, science provides the definitive narrative that represents nature on its own terms and catalyzes appropriate appreciation. In this article, I examine Carlson’s claim and argue for an environmental aesthetic philosophy of narrative multiplicity. Such a model would draw from scientific, indigenous, and journalistic narrative modes toward a critically pluralistic environmental aesthetic of the natural world. The ethical framework I propose—the function of which I characterize simply as narrative “cross-checking”—acknowledges the value of narrative heterogeneity in expressing and generating aesthetic experience of environments. This article’s thesis is forwarded through extensive treatment of these three narratives expressed within two examples, one of geographical place and one of environmental practice. As I will suggest, Denali, the prominent Alaskan mountain, can be aesthetically appreciated through the diverse narratives enumerated above. As a second case study, the traditional burning regimes of indigenous peoples reveal collectively how a critically pluralistic environmental aesthetic of narratives can be applied to—and identified to exist within—ecocultural practices, such as firing the landscape.
topic narratives
ecology
environmental aesthetics
Denali
traditional burning
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/2/1/99
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