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Practicing Theory and Reading Literature:
Faulkner’s “The Bear” in Terms of Deep Ecology
Abstract
•
The Marxist term praxis is essential for teaching critical theory and literature. By putting theory into practice, students not
only learn to read critically but also familiarize theory effectively. Theory illuminates a literary text, and vice versa. To exempli
the dialectical relationship between theory and literature, this paper, in the spirit of praxis, applies the theory of deep ecology to
Faulkner’s “The Bear” -- one of the stories in Go Down, Moses. Typical of American nature writing, Faulkner’s “The Bear” is
characterized with the writer’s attentiveness to the land, the wilderness and the vernacular. Faulkner’s accusations of the
Southern white men’s greedy exploitation of the land and slaves correspond to deep ecologists’ criticism of capitalism in many
ways. In addition, Faulkner’s environmental consciousness is examined with regard to Bakhtin’s concept of chronotope (i.e. tim
and place) -- the connectedness of temporal and spatial relationships expressed in literature. The theory of deep ecology
explicates Faulkner’s concern with the land and the others, while reciprocally the literary text gives artistic expression to the
theory, which might be abstract or esoteric otherwise. Approaching “The Bear” in terms of deep ecology and Bakhtin’s theory,
this paper highlights the significance of practice in studying/teaching critical theory and reading literature.
Keywords: Faulkner, “The Bear,” deep ecology, chronotope
Practicing Theory and Reading Literature:
Faulkner’s “The Bear” in Terms of Deep Ecology
•
The Marxist term praxis
Raman Selden argues: “This Marxist term has several implications. First theoretical work must always
address itself to the ‘real world,’ and not take flight into a stratospheric region beyond actual human
societies. Secondly, theories will, in any case, always possess some social and political interest or
commitment” (Practicing Theory and Reading Literature 7)
Practicing Theory and Reading Literature:
Faulkner’s “The Bear” in Terms of Deep Ecology
Deep ecology:
The term “deep ecology,” in contrast to “shallow ecology,” is first used by Norwegian writer Arne Naess,
referring to philosophical and cultural thinking about man’s relationship with natural environments. The
differences between the two terms -Fritjof Capra argues: “Shallow ecology is anthropocentric. It views humans as above or outside of nature, as the
source of all value, and ascribes only instrumental, or use value to nature. Deep ecology does not separate
humans from the natural environment, nor does it separate anything else from it. It does not see the world as a
collection of isolated objects but rather as a network of phenomena that are fundamentally interconnected and
interdependent. Deep ecology recognizes the intrinsic values of all living beings and views humans as just one
particular strand in the web of life.”
In brief, deep ecology is ecocentric and holistic, while shallow ecology is anthropocentric and utilitarian.
Practicing Theory and Reading Literature:
Faulkner’s “The Bear” in Terms of Deep Ecology
I.
Introduction: deep ecology and “The Bear”
II.
The Ecological Themes of “The Bear”
III.
Faulkner’s Environmental Consciousness: “The Bear” as a Novel of
Chronotope
IV.
Conclusion: Faulkner’s Conviction in Natural Law -- “The heart already
knows.”
I. Introduction: deep ecology and “The Bear”
A.
“The Bear” (1942) is one of the seven short stories of the novel Go
Down, Moses.
B.
The theme of “The Bear” and deep ecology: bear hunt, human stories,
nature and the environment
C.
Faulkner’s environmental consciousness in light of Bakhtin’s concept
of Chronotope
II. The Ecological Themes of “The Bear”
A.
Natural law vs. patriarchal law
1. the first three chapters: celebration of natural law
2. the last two chapters: criticism of patriarchal law
B.
Faulkner’s celebration of primitive values: the philosophy of the bear
hunt
1. Ike’s initiation into the wilderness, manhood and huntership
2. Man humbly acknowledges himself as a mere member of nature
C.
Faulkner’s attack on utilitarianism and phallogocentrism:
1. Faulkner accuses the McCaslin’s family exploitation of the land and the slaves
2. The debate between Ike and Emonds: the utilitarianism of McCaslin plantation
assaulted by Faulkner is inevitably related to anthropocentric Christianity (the
Bible) and patriarchal law (the ledger)
II. The Ecological Themes of “The Bear”
Phallogocentrism:
The term “phallogocentric” is conflated by Derrida with phallus and
logocentric. Terry Eagleton translates it as ‘cocksure,’ thus phallogocentrism
refers to certain “cocksureness, by which those who wield sexual and social
power maintain their grip” (189). In other words, phallogocentrism is the
ideology of those who appeal to authority of patriarchal and legal, logical
power to subdue feminine, unreasonable, barbaric and chaotic elements of
society.
III. Faulkner’s Environmental Consciousness: “The Bear” as a Novel of Chronotope
A.
•B.
The importance of time and place in a literary work:
Bakhtin:
They [time and place] are the organizing centers for the fundamental narrative events of
the novel. The chronotope is the place where the knots of narrative are tied and untied. It
can be said without qualification that to them belongs the meaning that shapes narrative.
Place and time in “The Bear”:
1. Place: Profound awareness of the land in Faulkner’s Yoknapatawpha County, similar
to Hardy’s works
2. Time: The ledger as kind of chronological or history
The complex genealogy of the McCaslin family implies the ecological premise that the
world on earth is an organic web of ecosystem, and no one is outside of it.
C.
Man can never be isolated from the environment (place and time/history), which
includes nature, animals, and human beings of all races; all are vitally interconnected.
VI. Conclusion: Faulkner’s Conviction in Natural Law -- “The heart already knows.”
A.
“The Bear” corresponds to deep ecology by virtue of Faulkner’s conviction in natural law,
biocentrism, and his denunciation of anthropocentric, patriarchal law
1. Ike’s initiation to the wilderness and his definite repudiation of the patrimony
2. Faulkner’s environmental consciousness in light of Bakhtin’s concept of chronotope
B.
Faulkner’s speech upon the Nobel Prize Award: truth is known by the heart, rather than
argued by sophists; higher truth (natural law) is beyond reason or argument, but touches
the heart.
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