Kathleen Dean Moore is an essayist, philosopher, and environmental advocate, the author of Wild Comfort, Pine Island Paradox, Riverwalking, Holdfast, and other award-winning books. Co-editor of books about Rachel Carson and the Apache philosopher Viola Cordova, Moore?s work has appeared in New York Times Magazine, Audubon, Discover, The Sun, Utne Reader, Conservation Biology, and Orion, where she serves on the Board of Directors. Moore is keynoting this year?s North Words Writers Symposium, which begins May
You?re co-editor with Michael P. Nelson of Moral Ground: Ethical Action for a People in Peril. The |
There are many answers:? Some writers are giving up writing and going to direct action, organizing the beautiful ?creative disruptions? the world needs.? Some are writing narratives of change.? Some are moving away from print to video or music. Some are already writing the elegies or the dystopian-future novels. Some are simply witnessing -- calling attention to the glorious lives that we recklessly destroy.? It?s not a matter of choosing the best approach.? Getting ourselves out of this mess is going to take the greatest exercise of the human imagination the world has ever seen.? It doesn?t matter how we do it. The moral imperative is to begin.?
You are also author of several books, including Wild Comfort, which Diane Ackerman called, ?a richly poetic book, and Moore a wonderful guide to the wilderness and our own wildness.? Is it more difficult to write on a more personal level? How can you express your own ideas without sounding preachy? I don?t want to be a preacher who knows all the answers -- solemn and wordy and self-satisfied.? I want to be the woman in the pew who rises to her feet, weeping and shouting ?halleluia.? She may have no answers, but she believes in questions. She may have no hope, but she knows joy.? She is not afraid. When she holds out her hands, pleading, she sees that they are spangled with the jewel colors of light through stained glass windows. She, not the preacher, is the poet in the sacred space.? Nature writing runs throughout your work, but you accomplish this through different threads of your career (editing, writing, teaching). Are they equally important to you, or does one take priority over another? This is a tough year for environmental writers, when decisions about our priorities are more urgent than ever. God knows, challenges are coming from all directions, and opportunities too.? But energy is finite and our time is about up. So what is to be done? And within what institutions?? I don?t know a single environmental writer who is not asking these questions. And for me? This is the year when the ?threads? of my career -- writing, public speaking, university teaching -- transmogrified into monsters that started eating each others? feet. ?So I quit my university position, and I?m spending all my time on writing and public speaking, primarily about climate change. Nature writing informs all this work -- the convictions that it?s not enough to celebrate the natural world while bulldozers and drilling rigs take it down, that we have to do what we can to prevent what I believe is a failure of reverence and a betrayal of love for the world.? On May 29 - June 1, you will be a faculty member at the North Words Writers Symposium, held in Yes, I do live in
??Okay,? I muttered, as profoundly and insightfully as I could.
I?m very excited about this.? It will be a chance to meet all theLynn Lovegreen writes Sweet Alaska Historicals, novels set in the Gold Rush era.
Source: http://49writers.blogspot.com/2013/05/lynn-lovegreen-interviews-kathleen-dean.html
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