Category Archives: News and Events

Gary Snyder to receive ‘Thoreau Prize’

The RoostThe great American poet and essayist Gary Snyder will be in Cambridge tomorrow night, Tuesday, April 10, to receive the Henry David Thoreau Prize for “literary excellence in nature writing” (now there’s an understatement) from PEN New England. You’ll find the details online here.  (The Poetry Foundation has a selection of Snyder’s poems and a few recordings online, which I recommend to the uninitiated.)

I’ll have more to say about Snyder and tomorrow night’s event in an upcoming post, but for now I’ll simply say that Snyder is a literary hero of mine. As I mentioned in a comment on my exchange with Paul Kingsnorth, Snyder’s engaged Zen Buddhism has great appeal to me (as a student of Zen myself). I see him as a profoundly unifying figure, bridging the divides between eco- and anthropo-centrism — and between withdrawal and engagement — that Kingsnorth and I represented in our “debate.”  Perhaps Snyder should be a reconciling model for us both.

Stay tuned. More on this to come later in the week.

Wen Stephenson

Introducing ‘The Roost’

I do not propose to write an ode to dejection, but to brag as lustily as chanticleer in the morning, standing on his roost, if only to wake my neighbors up.
–Walden, Ch. 2, “Where I Lived, and What I Lived For”

 

I’m sitting here in the office at Thoreau Farm, in the house where Henry David Thoreau was born, in 1817, out on Virginia Road in Concord, Mass. It’s late-morning, quiet inside and out, another unseasonably mild winter day. A few minutes ago I took a brisk walk around the property. The house itself has been moved a few hundred yards from its original site, but I’m glad to say it still has a small working farm out back, a local community food project called Gaining Ground, dedicated to hunger relief in the area. An organic farm with a social conscience – it’s hard to imagine a better neighbor to Henry’s birthplace, or a better image with which to begin this blog.

This is my first post here on The Roost, the blog that Thoreau Farm Trust has invited me to write and edit. Continue reading

Save the Date: Thoreau Farm Forum

posted by Patricia Hohl

Our first Thoreau Farm Forum of 2012 will be held at Concord Academy on Sunday, March 4th, at 3:00 PM, with Vivian Gornick, who will discuss her book Emma Goldman: Revolution as a Way of Life.

J. Edgar Hoover called Emma Goldman “the most dangerous woman in America” and got her deported; a 60’s feminist would call her “a role model, an inspiration” in a world of “enforced domesticity.”  And the Yale University Press calls Vivian Gornick’s book about Goldman “the story of a modern radical who took seriously the idea that inner liberation is the first business of social revolution.”

Inspired by Thoreau and Emerson, Goldman’s journey is one that can inform our own thinking in dealing with such difficult issues as environmental abuse, economic inequality, and foreign intervention. Continue reading