scholarly journals Manifesto: frente de libertação do fazendeiro irado

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 239-243
Author(s):  
Yuri Molinari
Keyword(s):  

Wendell Berry nasceu em 1934 em Henry County, Kentucky (EUA), onde mora com sua família em uma fazenda. É poeta, romancista, ensaísta, crítico cultural, ativista e fazendeiro; no começo dos anos 1960, foi professor universitário. Seu trabalho literário explora fundamentalmente a relação entre sujeito e lugar em um contexto rural ”“ tema presente também em seus ensaios e em seu trabalho de ativismo. Já recebeu numerosos prêmios por sua obra. Sua poesia une traços da écloga e da poesia didática, sem abdicar de aspectos políticos. O poema que ora apresentamos em tradução ”“ “Manifesto: the mad farmer liberation front”, do livro The Country of Marriage (1973) ”“ exemplifica bem a veia política de Berry, calcada em uma peculiar ironia e uma dicção direta, assim como o universo rural de onde emanam as personagens, cenários e problemáticas exploradas pelo poeta.

2020 ◽  
pp. 657-661

Although Wendell Berry is often thought of as Appalachian, he comes from western Kentucky. He has written about Appalachia, however, and his importance to the region is great. Berry was born in 1934 in Henry County in western Kentucky. He earned degrees in English at the University of Kentucky and studied creative writing with Wallace Stegner at Stanford University. After teaching at New York University’s Bronx campus, he moved back to Kentucky with his wife and children, and in 1965 began farming in Henry County. For many years he taught creative writing at the University of Kentucky....


1943 ◽  
Author(s):  
W.C. Stoll ◽  
J.J. Norton
Keyword(s):  

2001 ◽  
Vol 53 (4) ◽  
pp. 657 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harold Fromm ◽  
Edward O. Wilson ◽  
Wendell Berry
Keyword(s):  

Lumen et Vita ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Robertson

“We’re moving from one plane of reality to another,” says Terry Tempest Williams in an interview with Yes! Magazine, “and what is required of us is spiritual.” Many people alive in the United States today have grown up bombarded by the seemingly futile refrain that if we don’t cut back on x (activity) in y (years), z (catastrophe) will ensue – with x becoming broader in scope, y becoming smaller in number, and z becoming more horrific with each passing year. Among the natural responses to such daunting and repetitive premonitions are anxiety and anguish: “Accept the anxiety, embrace the deeper anguish,” suggests Robert Jensen, “and then get apocalyptic.” Drawing upon Laudato si, liberation theology, and eco psychology, this paper argues for the importance of encounters (increasingly scarce) with the natural world, human and other-than-human, as a necessary spiritual practice grounding a commitment to ecojustice in times which are indeed end times of sorts. In a consideration of theological anthropology, I suggest, along with ecopsychologist Will Adams, that our subjectivity is indeed an intersubjectivity, arising out of our ethical response to not only the human other but also the other-than-human. We are by nature relational beings, and we must remember that this relation is not only relevant in human-human relationships. Liberation theologians have articulated the foundational nature of the encounter with poor – an experience which at once inspires awe, evokes mercy, and demands action – in grounding liberative praxis. Likewise, the encounter with nature, when its intersubjectivity is considered, grounds a praxis of ecojustice. Finally, understanding apocalypse in its etymological sense as “unveiling,” I argue for the role of the apocalyptic imagination, in making possible sustained exposure to such encounters, which entail both joy and despair. “Expect the end of the world,” writes Wendell Berry, “Be joyful though you have considered all the facts…Practice resurrection.”


1941 ◽  
Vol 27 (6) ◽  
pp. 60-60
Author(s):  
Lynn C. Chambers
Keyword(s):  

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