some missing words

The cur­rent issue of Orion, one of my favorite mag­a­zines, fea­tures “World With­out Vio­lets,” a scary lit­tle essay by Robert Michael Pyle.

A mother in Britain dis­cov­ered that the edi­tors of the cur­rent Oxford Junior Dic­tio­nary, in their zeal to bring this lit­tle dic­tio­nary for chil­dren up to date, had removed a long list of words deal­ing with nature in order to make room for words like “broad­band,” “bungee jump­ing” and “chat room.”

Pyle writes about the uni­verse the edi­tors of the Dic­tio­nary have cre­ated for the cur­rent gen­er­a­tion of chil­dren who would use it:

It is a world with­out vio­lets. Spring comes unan­nounced by catkins and pro­ceeds with­out ben­e­fit of cro­cuses, cowslips, or tulips. Sum­mer brings no laven­der, mel­ons, or nec­tarines, and autumn is absent of acorns, almonds, and hazel­nuts. Win­ter must be endured with­out the holly and the ivy, the wren or the mistletoe.

So, sud­denly bungee jumping–how retro-80s is that concept?–is more impor­tant than tulips, broad­band more nec­es­sary for chil­dren to know about than mel­ons, and chat rooms more of our real world than holly.

If some­one decides that we don’t need a word for some­thing, does that some­thing cease to exist? Not really. But what kind of mind­set decides that chil­dren don’t need to know about their nat­ural world any­more? I was disturbed.

July 13 2009 | Categories: landscapequotes | Tags: | 5 Comments »

teach wonder

Imag­ine if [kids] knew plants and ani­mals the way they knew brand names and logos, if they knew moun­tains the way the know malls. They would feel like full par­tic­i­pants in the land­scapes they inhabit, hap­pily roam­ing the ridges and creeks in a world that needs their atten­tive­ness… I share with Rachel Car­son the hope that chil­dren be given a sense of won­der so inde­struc­tible that it would last through­out life.“
Rick Van Noy, in A Nat­ural Sense of Won­der: Con­nect­ing Kids with Nature through the Sea­sons, quoted in a book review by Brian Doyle in the cur­rent issue of Orion.

January 23 2009 | Categories: landscapequotes | Tags: | No Comments »