Ecoregionalism Themes in Winter’s
Bone
According
to Chester Foster at the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, “there is a growing trend to approach land
use, natural resources and environmental problems on a regional basis. Since
existing government agencies often lack broad authority, local and
environmental leaders are increasingly taking the initiative to address the
social, economic and environmental issues of a particular place by reaching
across conventional political and jurisdictional boundaries, sectors and
disciplines.”
As Foster notes, “At the turn
of the twenty-first century, prompted by dissatisfaction with the growing
numbers, scale and complexity of governmental functions, and coincident with
the public commitment to civic forms of environmentalism, the stage was set for
the current revival of interest in regionalism.”
Foster notes
multiple characteristics of a region that could range in size from a
neighborhood to a larger multi-state area like the Midwest or Appalachia.
Foster outlines seven attributes associated with a “region” that inform
approaches to environmental concerns:
· a special place that people care about and
identify with;
· a named area that "stirs the blood and
arouses passion";
· a place with a unity or homogeneity of some
sort;
· an area defined by common system functions;
· a place with a similar context and culture;
· an area with a psychic identity (a "region
of the mind"); and/or
·
a place with a history
("story") around which people can convene, organize and plan for what
they want and need (C. Foster 2002a).
Winter’s Bone as both novel and film adaptation fulfills all of these criteria,
illustrating the power of place as both identity marker and source of conflict.
The environmental connections serve as both positive and negative markers of
the Ozark Mountain place identity.
Group I’s presentation notes ways the novel addresses
many of these concerns, noting several connected with unity and common system
functions:
“There is the acknowledgement of outsiders, the
law that demands Jessup from the community despite the community having ‘taken
care of’ Jessup.
“There is the internal power structure of the
Ozark valleys that have been settled by the original families, which state law
does not recognize but by which Ree and her kin must abide.
“The resolution at the end of the novel involves
Ree appeasing the community’s internal system of justice and the external
system of state law. The ending hints
that Ree may become a go-between for the state and county law officers and her
community, as she ponders a possible future with the bond office in the way of
making peace between them and her own people.”
The novel and film also broach environmental
concerns specific to the region that highlight a people’s connections with their
ecology. The obvious one noted in the PPT are the family trees Ree refuses to
sell:
“The sun was taller
though light had not yet broken through to the ground. The path was narrow and
iced on the north slope. These rough acres were Bromont acres and they’d never
been razed for timber, so the biggest old trees in the area stood on this
ground. Magically fat and towering oak trees with limbs grown into pleasingly
akimbo swirls were common. Hickory, sycamore, and all the rest prospered as well. The last stretch of native
pine in the county grew up the way, and all the old-growth timber was much
coveted by sneaking men with saws. If sold, the timber could fetch a fair pile
of dollars, probably, but it was understood by the first Bromont and passed
down to the rest that the true price of such a sale would be the ruination of
home, and despite lean years of hardship no generation yet wanted to be the one
who wrought that upon the family land. Grandad Bromont had famously chased
timber-snakers away at gunpoint many, many times, and though Dad had never been
eager to wave his gun about in defense of trees, he’d loaded up and done it
whenever required.” Woodrell, Daniel. Winter's Bone (p. 104). Little, Brown and
Company. Kindle Edition.
One could also argue that environmental
injustices contribute to the meth epidemic afflicting the interconnected Ozark families.
Although missing from the plot of either novel or film, lead and zinc mining have
negatively affected resources including water and soil, on which rural families
rely.
The novel especially highlights the conflicting
relationships with the natural environment shared by characters in the work. Their survival relies on resources like the
potatoes they grow and the venison and squirrel they “harvest.” But Ree also
battles the elements in the winter setting of the novel, especially because in
the novel’s context, she stomps through snow with bare legs below cotton dresses
and a shared winter coat. The film glosses over some of this but still
emphasizes this dual relationship with the natural world with Ree’s march
across the hills and search for help, in small ways via shared supplies and boarding
for a horse, as well as the central search for her father’s bones.
No comments:
Post a Comment