Wes Jackson is heavily influenced by the cultural legacy of grandparents, all four of whom were born before the Civil War began, and from his parents, who were born before 1900. He was born into a culture of crop diversity where animals and people were out in the fields and around. He saw the tractor arrive and the horses leave. After you read
Hogs Are Up: Stories of the Land, with Digressions you may share his misgivings about what conventional thinkers see as “progress.”
Jackson is constantly exploring the world around him and will engage anyone who can help him think about a discovery, an experiment, or recent insight. Jackson believes that our insights must go beyond the latest scholarly study and government report if we are to get the necessary interest for people to change. The stories and digressions he shares in
Hogs Are Up are the fruit of a longtime effort to lay the agricultural and cultural foundation for a new worldview grounded in nature’s principles and located in rural communities able to survive through a new relationship of humanity to the ecosphere.
Зміст
Foreword: “Tell about it, ” by Robert Jensen
Where to Begin and End?
Introduction
Getting the story right can be complicated. Perspective matters. Sometimes the truth sneaks up on you.
Year of Decision 1976: The Rest of the Story
Down from the College
One Thing Leads to Another
Some stories have to wander, and that’s just fine.
Over the Fence is Out: Softball Rules at West Indianola, District
Sharon Stays at Home, Mostly
Why Can’t I Pick Up Dug Potatoes Fast?
A Private’s Supper on the Oregon Trail near Topeka
My Rural Life
Living with less cultivates virtues, though a bit of vice is inevitable wherever one lives.
The Matfield Green Women’s Club
Uncle John
My Life with Plants and Their Ecosystems: 1936-1952
How Knowing the FFA Creed Came in Handy
Brother Harley at the European Union Parliament
Schooling, Formal and Informal
We often learn the most from the most unusual people.
My Start in Botany: Earning a C, the Hard Way
Dr. Wassermann
Doc Horr
Harry Mason
Scientifically Speaking
I eventually learned that science isn’t a set of facts, theories, or methods, but rather is a way*#8212;though not the only way—of being in theworld.
A Field Trip with Three Great Scientists
An Appeal to the Russians
The Lilac Tree Is in Near-Full Bloom This Morning, but So What?
Ideas I’ve Run into along the Way
It can be dangerous to think too much. but it’s even more dangerous to think too little.
The Danger of Nuance without News
Wondering about the Origin of fire
How Lothar Convinced Me that Dinosaurs Did Not Exist until Humans Discovered Them
David Defeats Goliath
Living in the Industrial World
We have a love/hate relationship with the world we have made. We might as well get used to it.
Satan Is on the Other End
E. F. Schumacher Visits the Land, March 1977
The Shard and My Chevy Silverado
Thoughts on the Natural History of Eden
What is to Become of Us?
What do we need to be if there is to be a future? Who do we need to be?
The Day I Discovered that I Am a Groupie
The Necessity of Insulting the Meat: Ferocious Egalitarianism
Leland
Conclusion: Hardening Off
Notes