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Mapping the Sacred Landscape: Spirituality and the Contemporary Literature of Nature
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 September 2014
Abstract
This essay is an attempt to sketch a preliminary map of the emerging dialogue between spirituality and the contemporary literature of nature. This includes: (1) a consideration of their distinctive approaches to the mapping of the sacred landscape; (2) an exploration of some of the ambiguities and tensions within the literature of nature toward matters of religion; (3) an outline of recent developments within the discipline of spirituality that enable scholars in that field to respond more thoughtfully to questions raised by nature writers; (4) a description of the genres found in the burgeoning literature of nature writing and the themes that make it a useful resource and conversation partner for spirituality; (5) an evaluation of three prominent themes of contemporary nature writing—relationship, mystery, and moral responsibility—of particular importance for developing a contemporary spirituality of nature.
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References
1 The literature on this question is vast and growing rapidly. What follows is meant only to indicate some of the main dimensions of the current discussion. For a recent bibliographical survey on Christianity's diverse responses to the ecological crisis, see Sheldon, Joseph, Rediscovery of Creation: A Bibliographical Study of the Church's Response to the Environmental Crisis (Metuchen, NJ: American Theological Library Association/Scarecrow Press, 1992).Google Scholar
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2 For a sense of the diversity and richness of contemporary nature writing, one may consult the numerous anthologies that have appeared in recent years. See, e.g., Lyon, Thomas J., ed., This Incomperahle Lande: A Book of American Nature Writing (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1989);Google ScholarWitness: New Nature Writing III:4 (1989);Google ScholarHalpern, Daniel, ed., On Nature: Nature, Landscape, and Natural History (San Francisco: North Point Press, 1987);Google ScholarTrimble, Stephen, ed., Words from the Land: Encounters with Natural History Writing (Salt Lake City, UT: Peregrine Smith, 1989);Google ScholarFinch, Robert and Elder, John, eds., The Norton Book of Nature Writing (New York: Norton, 1990);Google ScholarMurray, John A., ed., Nature's New Voices (Golden, CO: Fulcrum, 1992);Google Scholar and Sauer, Peter, ed., Finding Home (Boston: Beacon, 1992).Google Scholar
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6 For some, the answer to this question is negative. Thomas Berry speaks of the need for a “new story,” by which he means the story emerging from our contemporary scientific understanding of the universe, to supplant the deeply flawed and ecologically harmful story of Christianity. Calvin Luther Martin has mounted a sharp critique of human-centered historical consciousness, suggesting that our attachment to notions of order and progress, of a chosen people and linear time, have fueled our sense that the world is ours to improve, exploit, and even destroy. Both of these thinkers implicitly call into question the possibility or advisability of contemporary retrieval of ancient spiritual sensibilities. See Berry, Thomas, The Dream of the Earth (San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1988)Google Scholar, and Martin, Calvin Luther, In the Spirit of the Earth: Rethinking History and Time (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992).Google Scholar
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What I am describing here is a tendency within the history of Christian spirituality A careful reading of the history of Christian spirituality reveals a tremendous variation and complexity regarding how the physical world was viewed See for example the ambiguous and often conflicting attitudes toward the body in early and medieval Brown, Christianity Peter, The Body and Society Men, Women, and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity (New YorkColumbia University Press, 1988)Google Scholar, and Bynum, Caroline Walker, Holy Feast and Holy Fast The Religious Significance of Food to Medieval Women (Berkeley and Los AngelesUniversity of California Press, 1987)Google Scholar
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10 Schneiders, , “Spirituality in the Academy,” 678.Google Scholar This ambiguity is significant, reflecting an important shift in our understanding of the discipline and an expanded notion of spirituality itself. In particular it represents a rejection of the choice to use the term “spirituality” to refer only to spiritual experience and to use the term “spiritual theology” to refer to the discipline that studies the experience. For a discussion of spiritual theology, see Bradley Hanson, “Christian Spirituality and Spiritual Theology,” Dialog 21 (1982): 207–12;Google ScholarCousins, Ewert, “Spirituality: A Resource for Theology,” Catholic Theological Society of America Proceedings 35 (1980): 124–37;Google Scholar and Megyer, Eugene, “Theological Trends: Spiritual Theology Today,” The Way 21 (1981): 55–67.Google Scholar For a rebuttal of this position, see Schneiders, , “Spirituality in the Academy,” 687–90.Google Scholar
11 While I intend to show that both the term and the field can be understood as inclusive of the widest possible range of human experience, I will focus here on the current discussions about the meaning of Christian spirituality. This is in part because there has been more concentrated attention devoted to the definition of spirituality within the Christian tradition than anywhere else. Also, it is only by seeing how the idea of spirituality has taken root and developed within a particular tradition that we can begin to think about what it might mean to talk about spirituality in other traditions of thought and practice.
12 McGinn provides an approximate quantification of this diversity: “without by any means making an exhaustive search, I recently turned up some thirty-five different definitions of spirituality …” (“The Letter and the Spirit,” 4).
13 Eire, Carlos M. N., “Major Problems in the Definition of Spirituality as an Academic Discipline” in Modern Christian Spirituality: Methodological and Historical Essays, ed. Hanson, Bradley (Atlanta, GA: Scholars Press, 1990), 36.Google Scholar
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19 The expansion of spirituality's meaning and the refinement of its method have had a strong impact on the contemporary study of religious experience. Two of the most prominent examples of this are Liberation Spirituality and Feminist Spirituality. As Gustavo Gutierrez has noted, in Latin America the shift in focus from dogma to experience has had two major effects. First, it has given voice to the spiritual experience of the poor majorities, rather than simply assuming the privileged elites could speak for all. Secondly, with the attention to widespread experience of poverty, much greater emphasis has been placed on the material basis of religious experience. See Gutierrez, Gustavo, We Drink from Our Own Wells (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1984)Google Scholar, and Sobrino, Jon, Spirituality of Liberation (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1988).Google Scholar In a similar way, the focus on experience has dramatically transformed our understanding of women's characteristic sense of the transcendent. See Conn, Joann Wolski, ed., Women's Spirituality: Resources for Christian Development (New York: Paulist, 1986).Google Scholar
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22 Sharp, Dallas Lore, “The Nature Writer,” New Outlook 94 (04 16, 1910): 94–100.Google Scholar Cf. also Halsey, Francis W., “The Rise of Nature Writers,” American Monthly Review of Reviews 26 (11 1902): 56–71.Google Scholar For a more detailed description, see Scheese, , “Nature Writing,” 205.Google Scholar
23 Ibid.
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27 The “annotated booklist” compiled by the advisory editors of Daniel Halpern's On Nature (Annie Dillard, Gretel Ehrlich, Barry Lopez, Edward Hoagland, Robert Finch, and John Hay) vividly illustrates the difficulty of neatly demarcating this literature (see 283-301).
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35 Ibid., 5.
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