The Encyclopedia of Trouble and Spaciousness

BOOK: The Encyclopedia of Trouble and Spaciousness
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A Geographical Index

THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF TROUBLE AND SPACIOUSNESS

Published by Trinity University Press

San Antonio, Texas 78212

Copyright © 2014 by Rebecca Solnit

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher.

Jacket design by David Bullen

Book design by BookMatters, Berkeley, California

Cover art: Rebecca Solnit, Rome, Italy, 2009,

courtesy of FameFlynet Pictures

World map created by Ben Pease/Pease Press using
indiemapper.com

Trinity University Press strives to produce its books using methods and materials in an environmentally sensitive manner. We favor working with manufacturers that practice sustainable management of all natural resources, produce paper using recycled stock, and manage forests with the best possible practices for people, biodiversity, and sustainability. The press is a member of the Green Press Initiative, a nonprofit program dedicated to supporting publishers in their efforts to reduce their impacts on endangered forests, climate change, and forest-dependent communities.

The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials,
ANSI
39.48–1992.

Cataloging-in-Publication data on file at the Library of Congress.

ISBN 978-1-59534-199-0 ebook

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CONTENTS

      
Introduction: Icebergs and Laundry

A
    
Cyclopedia of an
A
rctic Expedition

B
    
The
B
utterfly and the
B
oiling Point

      
Reflections on the Arab Spring and After

C
    
Rattlesnake in Mailbox

      
C
ults,
C
reeps,
C
alifornia in the 1970s

      
Concrete in Paradise

      
Some Pictures of Coastal
C
alifornia

      
C
limate Change Is Violence

      
Dry Lands

      
The
C
olorado River and Hydrological Madness of the West

D
    
D
etroit Arcadia

      
Exploring the Post-American Landscape

E
    
One Nation under
E
lvis

      
E
nvironmentalism for
E
veryone

G
    
Winged Mercury and the
G
olden Calf

      
Heavy Metal Histories

      
Oil and Water

      
The BP Spill in the
G
ulf

H
    
In
H
aiti, Words Can Kill

      
Icebergs and Shadows

      
Further Adventures in the Landscape of
H
ope

I
     
I
nside Out, or
I
nterior Space

      
(and Interior Decoration)

      
Notes from Nowhere

      
I
celand’s Polite Dystopia

      
The Volcano Erupts

      
I
celand in Upheaval

J
    
The Great Tōhoku Earthquake and Tsunami

      
Aftermaths in
J
apan

      
Arrival Gates

      
The Inari Shrine in Kyoto,
J
apan

      
J
ourney to the Center

      
(on Elín Hansdóttir’s Labyrinth
Path
)

L
    
L
etter to a Dead Man on the Occupation of Hope

M
  
Apologies to
M
exico

      
The Drug Trade and GNP (Gross National Pain)

N
    
Reconstructing the Story of the Storm

      
N
ew Orleans Five Years After

      
We Won’t Bow Down

      
Carnival and Resistance in
N
ew Orleans

S
    
The Google Bus

      
S
ilicon Valley Invades

      
We’re Breaking Up

      
Noncommunications in the
S
ilicon Age

      
Pale Bus, Pale Rider

      
S
ilicon Valley Invades, Cont’d

T
    
On the Dirtiness of Laundry and the Strength of Sisters

      
Or, Mysteries of Henry David
T
horeau, Unsolved

U
    
Revolutionary Plots

      
On
U
rban Gardening

V
    
The
V
isibility Wars

Z
    
Revolution of the Snails

      
Encounters with the
Z
apatistas

      
Acknowledgments

      
Index

INTRODUCTION

Icebergs and Laundry

That thing we call a place is the intersection of many changing forces passing through, whirling around, mixing, dissolving, and exploding in a fixed location. To write about a place is to acknowledge that phenomena often treated separately—ecology, democracy, culture, storytelling, urban design, individual life histories and collective endeavors—coexist. They coexist geographically, spatially, in place, and to understand a place is to engage with braided narratives and sui generis explorations.

This is a book about places, which is to say it’s about those many forces in combination. About Shinto landscape in Japan, about yearnings for and intermittent realizations of justice and democracy in northern Africa and Iceland and the United States, about the way Yankee drug consumption is devastating Mexico (in an essay that I first pictured as a map showing pain being outsourced the way labor and toxic waste are outsourced to poorer countries), about why we are obsessed with gardening right now, about what environmentalists got wrong about country music and nearly everyone got wrong about Henry David Thoreau’s laundry, about technology and amnesia in San Francisco. And it’s about the places themselves: the orange of those Shinto gates, the blue of icebergs, about dancing in the streets of New Orleans, and occupying in the streets of New York.

I think of myself as a San Franciscan, a Californian, and a Westerner, three concentric rings that have enclosed many of my earlier projects. But when I put together the essays in
The Encyclopedia of Trouble and Spaciousness
, I was surprised to survey the breadth of my travels: I’d been reporting from the Arctic to Mexico, from Japan to Detroit to Occupy Wall Street. A few things led me out of my region.

One was that in the Bush era, every American seemed saddled with the
weight of the world; our country was in Afghanistan and Iraq (and had, as it did before and does now, about 1,000 military bases around the world and a disproportionate role not only in climate change but also in sabotaging international agreements to do something about it). I was compelled to become a public citizen and to think about broad issues—hope, civil society, revolution, climate—and the questions these subjects raised had answers and ideas cached across the globe.

But it wasn’t only responsibility that took me afar; it was invitations and curiosity. I had always wanted to go to the far north, and invitations to go to Iceland in 2008 and Svalbard in the farthest north in 2011 were taken up with alacrity. The latter place fulfilled my wildest desires for northernness, but Iceland turned out to be a complicated political powder keg that would explode not long after I wrote about it. (My first piece on Iceland included in this anthology appeared about two weeks before the country’s economy collapsed and its population rebelled. During those two weeks I was told that I’d been harsh on a country that had managed to craft a very pretty image of itself; afterward I never heard that again. I only regret that I wasn’t able to cover Iceland’s next five years of glorious political experimentation—which faded in spring of 2013, when Icelanders reelected the neoliberals who destroyed the economy in the first place, like a wife going back to her abusive husband.)

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