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The Puritan Origins of the American Wilderness Movement
J. Baird Callicott, University of North Texas
Priscilla Solis Ybarra, Rice University
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Guiding Student Discussion
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(part 3 of 4)

GUIDING STUDENT DISCUSSION
Havasu Falls, Arizona
Havasu Falls, Arizona

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"Wilderness is, in short, a 'socially constructed' idea."

When the topic of wilderness comes up for discussion, many students will entertain fantasies of themselves alone or with a small group of good friends—properly (and stylishly) outfitted by L.L. Bean and Land's End, of course—searching for themselves, for God (or the Oversoul if they have been exposed to Emerson and Thoreau), or communion with Nature, or for the properly romantic setting for consummating a sexual attraction in a wilderness setting. Images of backpacking down soft trails, leading into shady glens, surrounding deep pools of crystal water, beneath towering, rumbling falls will dance in their heads. Only the most habitually critical students are likely to get what you're talking about when you suggest to them that "wilderness" is not a name like "mountain" or "river" that refers to common features of nature, but a lens through which nature is perceived. Wilderness is, in short, a "socially constructed" idea. Your job is to help them deconstruct it.

U.S. Capitol
John Winthrop
John Winthrop

First, ask students to imaginatively put themselves in the place of the first generation of Puritans—learned in the words of the Old Testament, but utterly ignorant of the ecology of the New World—set down on the upper Mid-Atlantic coast of a little-known continent the size of which they could not begin to imagine. None of their expectations were borne out by the stark "reality" confronting them. It's getting on toward winter—gray, cold, damp, dark,
Magalloway River
Magalloway River

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and devoid of sustenance if you are used to looking at British grain fields, kitchen gardens, and barn yards. And much of what does animate the landscape is terrifying—wolves, a variety of feline predators, and worst of all, unpredictable peoples with incomprehensible languages, customs, rituals, and beliefs. A dismal, dark, howling, and hideous wilderness indeed! Some students might protest, and, with the 20/20 vision of hindsight and youthful self-confidence, insist that they would have been able to appreciate the New England landscape for its richness and beauty. Here a bit of Morton might reinforce, but also sober their sense of adventure and receptivity. For Morton was a truly adventurous and receptive sojourner in the landscape of early contact and colonization, but even his attitude was far from that of a contemporary anthropologist and ecologist.

National Archives
Iroquoian chief
Iroquoian chief

Then, ask your students imaginatively to put themselves in the place of the Native Americans whose beloved and often contested homeland the seventeenth-century English settlers had invaded and intended to possess. The landscape is friendly, teeming with sustenance—easily harvested shellfish in the estuaries,
Magalloway River
Magalloway River

National Archives
abundant winter game in the woods for skilled and experienced hunters who know its habits and wiles, salmon runs in the springtime streams, wild summer and fall fruits, and communal village gardens of maize, squash, and beans. If one could somehow translate the word "wilderness" into an Iroquoian tongue, this place would not be a wilderness from the Indian point of view.

Now, put these two exercises in imagination side by side. Maybe ask two students to come forward and role-play. Ask one to be a Puritan pilgrim and the other an American Indian standing shoulder to shoulder surveying the landscape from a high prominence. You get one country and two worlds: a terrifying, strange, wild world for one; a hospitable, familiar (and place-named), well-known world for the other.


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"Wilderness and American Identity" Essays
The Puritan Origins of the American Wilderness Movement | The Challenge of the Arid West |
Rachel Carson and the Awakening of Environmental Consciousness
Essay-Related Links


Wilderness and American Identity
The Use of the LandNative Americans and the Land
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