Four  thousand different languages and cultures about the year 1900, also  being swept away in the inexorable push towards monoculture. Monoculture  has had two specific kinds of fuelling in the last six thousand years.  In that fifty thousand year time scale (I owe a great deal to Dr.  Stanley Diamond for my sense of this), the major part of man's  interesting career has been spent as a hunter and gatherer, in “primary"  cultures. As recently as 12,000 years ago, agriculture began to play a  small part in some corners of the world. It's only in the last 3  millenia that agriculture has really penetrated widely. Civilization,  8,000 years old; class structure, surplus wealth accumulation, literate  societies which on balance in that total represent a very small part of  human experience; literacy representing an even tinier part of human  experience, since it's only been in the last two centuries that any  sizable proportion of any civilized country has had much literacy. Thus  oral literature, the ballad, the folktale, myth, the songs, the subject  matter of “ethnopoetics" has been the major literary experience of  mankind. Understanding that, it becomes all the more poignant when we  realize that the richness is being swept away.
Now, in the first issue of Alcheringa,  Jerome Rothenberg and Dennis Tedlock made a statement of intention  which I'd like to refer back to because it also seems to me that  gathering here in this way, almost _ve years later, we can take a look  back and see how those original stated intentions of Alcheringa  seem to us now and how we'd worked with them. Eight points in this  statement. “As the first magazine of the world's tribal poetries, Alcheringa will   not be a scholarly journal of `ethnopoetics,' so much as a place where  tribal poetry can appear in English translation an can act (in the  oldest and newest of poetic traditions) to change men's minds and  lives." Note that, "to change men's minds and lives." While its sources  will be different from other poetry magazines it will be aiming at the  struggling and revelatory presentation that has  been common to our avant-gardes. Along the way we hope: (1) by exploring  the full range of man's poetries to enlarge our understanding of what a  poem may be; (2) to provide a ground for experiments in the translation  of tribal/oral poetry and a forum to discuss the possibilities and  problems of translation from widely divergent cultures; (3) to encourage  poets to participate actively in the translation of tribal/oral poetry;  (4) to encourage ethnologists and linguists to
do  work increasingly ignored by academic publications in their fields,  namely to present the tribal poetries as values in themselves, rather  than as ethnographical data; (5) to be a vanguard for the initiation of  cooperative projects along these lines between poets, ethnologists,  songmen, and others; (6) to return to complex/`primitive' systems of  poetry, as (intermedia) performance, etc., and to explore ways of  presenting these in translation; (7) to emphasize by example and  commentary the relevance of tribal poetry to where we are today; (8) to  combat cultural genocide in all of its manifestations."
I  think that most of us understand what has happened in regard to those  areas of interaction described in points 2 through 7 over the last four  or five years, so I'm going to concentrate my comments on the two points  “combat cultural genocide" and "what a poem may be."
To  combat cultural genocide one needs a critique of civilization itself,  and some thought about what happens when “crossing barriers" takes  place; when different, small, relatively self-sufficient cultures begin  to contact each other and that interaction becomes stepped up by a  historical process of growing populations, growing accumulation of  surplus wealth and so forth. It's probably true that there's a certain  basic cross-cultural distrust in small societies that is resolvable by  trade, exchange, or periodic gambling games, festivities, and singing  together. The sheer fact of distance alone, physical distance between  two households, makes one group think of those other people as “the  others."
Gary Snyder
Gary Snyder
This  “politics" is fundamentally the question of what occidental and  industrial technological civilization is doing to the earth. The earth:  (I'm just going to remind us of a few facts), is 57 million square  miles, 3.7 billion human beings, evolved over the last 4 million years;  plus, 2 million species of insects, 1 million species of plants, 20  thousand species of fish, and 8,700 species of birds; constructed out of  97 naturally occurring surface elements with the power of the annual  solar income of the sun. That is a lot of diversity. Yesterday, (who was  it), David Antin, I believe, told how the Tragedians asked Plato to let  them put on some tragedies. Plato said, " Very interesting, gentlemen,  but I must tell you something. We have prepared here the greatest  tragedy of all. It is called The State."
From  a very early age I found myself standing in an unde_nable awe before  the natural world. An attitude of gratitude, wonder, and a sense of  protection especially as I began to see the hills being bulldozed down  for roads, and the forests of the Paci_c Nothwest magically oat away on  logging trucks. I grew up in a rural family in the state of Washington.  My grandfather was a homesteader in the Paci_c Northwest. The economic  base of the whole region was logging. In trying to grasp the dynamics of  what was happening, rural state of Washington, 1930's, depression,  white boy out in the country, German on one side, Scotch- Irish on the  other side, radical, that is to say, sort of grass roots Union, I.W.W.,  and socialist-radical parents, I found nothing in their orientation,  (critical as it was of American politics and economics), that could give  me an access to understanding what was happening. I had to _nd that  through reading and
imagination, which lead me into a variety of politics: Marxist, Anarchist, and onwards.
Now  I would like to think of the possibility of a new humanities.  Humanities, remember, being a post-renaissance way of looking at the  question of how to shake man loose from the theological vision of the  Middle Ages. But I can't think about our situation in anything less than  a forty thousand year time scale. Fifty thousand years is not very  long. If we wanted to talk about hominid evolution we'd have to work  with something like four million years. Forty thousand years is a useful  working time scale because we can be sure that through the whole of  that period man has been in the same body and in the same mind that he  is now. All the evidence we have indicates that imagination, intellect,  wit, decision, speed, skill, was fully developed forty thousand years  ago. In fact, it may be that we were a little smarter forty thousand  years ago since brain size has somewhat declined on the average from  that point of Cro-Magnon. It is interesting that even the average size  of the Neanderthal skull, (whom most people have a rather unattering  image of), indicates larger brain size than modern man. We don't know  why brain size declined. It probably has something to do with \society,"  if you want to blame it on something. Society providing bu_ers and  protection of an increasingly complicated order so that as it became  larger in scope, and populations larger in size, it protected  individuals from those demands for speed, skill, knowledge, and  intelligence that were common in the Upper Paleolithic.
The personal direct contact with the natural world required of hunters and gatherers | men and women both -  a tremendous continual awareness. What we are witnessing in the world  today is an unparalleled waterfall of destruction of a diversity of  human cultures; plant species; animal species; of the richness of the  biosphere and the millions of years of organic evolution that have gone  into it. In a sense ethnopoetics is like some field of zoology that is  studying disappearing species. We must have a concern with this because  our subject matter is rapidly disappearing and we, (and I mean “we" to  mean everyone, regardless of his color or ethical background, who is now  plugged in to the fossil fuel industrial society, we are all that  “we"), we are the ones who are in some inexorable, karmic, historical way keeping it going down. 
Four  thousand different languages and cultures about the year 1900, also  being swept away in the inexorable push towards monoculture. Monoculture  has had two specific kinds of fuelling in the last six thousand years.  In that fifty thousand year time scale (I owe a great deal to Dr.  Stanley Diamond for my sense of this), the major part of man's  interesting career has been spent as a hunter and gatherer, in “primary"  cultures. As recently as 12,000 years ago, agriculture began to play a  small part in some corners of the world. It's only in the last 3  millenia that agriculture has really penetrated widely. Civilization,  8,000 years old; class structure, surplus wealth accumulation, literate  societies which on balance in that total represent a very small part of  human experience; literacy representing an even tinier part of human  experience, since it's only been in the last two centuries that any  sizable proportion of any civilized country has had much literacy. Thus  oral literature, the ballad, the folktale, myth, the songs, the subject  matter of “ethnopoetics" has been the major literary experience of  mankind. Understanding that, it becomes all the more poignant when we  realize that the richness is being swept away.
Now, in the first issue of Alcheringa,  Jerome Rothenberg and Dennis Tedlock made a statement of intention  which I'd like to refer back to because it also seems to me that  gathering here in this way, almost _ve years later, we can take a look  back and see how those original stated intentions of Alcheringa  seem to us now and how we'd worked with them. Eight points in this  statement. “As the first magazine of the world's tribal poetries, Alcheringa will  not be a scholarly journal of `ethnopoetics,' so much as a place where  tribal poetry can appear in English translation an can act (in the  oldest and newest of poetic traditions) to change men's minds and  lives." Note that, "to change men's minds and lives." While its sources will be different from other poetry magazines it will be aiming at the struggling and revelatory presentation that has  been common to our avant-gardes. Along the way we hope: (1) by exploring  the full range of man's poetries to enlarge our understanding of what a  poem may be; (2) to provide a ground for experiments in the translation  of tribal/oral poetry and a forum to discuss the possibilities and  problems of translation from widely divergent cultures; (3) to encourage  poets to participate actively in the translation of tribal/oral poetry;  (4) to encourage ethnologists and linguists to
do  work increasingly ignored by academic publications in their fields,  namely to present the tribal poetries as values in themselves, rather  than as ethnographical data; (5) to be a vanguard for the initiation of  cooperative projects along these lines between poets, ethnologists,  songmen, and others; (6) to return to complex/`primitive' systems of  poetry, as (intermedia) performance, etc., and to explore ways of  presenting these in translation; (7) to emphasize by example and  commentary the relevance of tribal poetry to where we are today; (8) to  combat cultural genocide in all of its manifestations."
I  think that most of us understand what has happened in regard to those  areas of interaction described in points 2 through 7 over the last four  or five years, so I'm going to concentrate my comments on the two points  “combat cultural genocide" and "what a poem may be."
To  combat cultural genocide one needs a critique of civilization itself,  and some thought about what happens when “crossing barriers" takes  place; when different, small, relatively self-sufficient cultures begin  to contact each other and that interaction becomes stepped up by a  historical process of growing populations, growing accumulation of  surplus wealth and so forth. It's probably true that there's a certain  basic cross-cultural distrust in small societies that is resolvable by  trade, exchange, or periodic gambling games, festivities, and singing  together. The sheer fact of distance alone, physical distance between  two households, makes one group think of those other people as “the  others."
The real arms race starts maybe with bronze weapons and certainly with iron. Raiding cultures emerge; this is the first  turbulent kind of interface. Some people quit farming and hunting, and  take up raiding for a living. This goes on today, in what Ray Dasmann  calls the relationship between ecosystem cultures and biosphere  cultures. Ecosystem cultures being those whose economic base of support  is a natural region, a watershed, a plant zone, a natural territory  within which they have to make their whole living. Living within the  terms of an ecosystem, out of self-interest if nothing else, you are  careful. You don't destroy the soils, you don't kill all the game, you  don't log it o_ and let the water wash the soil away. Biosphere cultures  are the cultures that begin with early civilization and the centralized  state; are cultures that spread their economic support system out far  enough that they can a_ord to wreck one ecosystem, and keep moving on.  Well, that's Rome, that's Babylon. It's just a big enough spread that  you can begin to be irresponsible about certain specific local territories. It leads us to imperialist civilization with capitalism and institutionalized economic growth. The firrst  energy hit, to go back again to those two fuelings of monoculture, was  slavery. The energy we operate by fundamentally is the annual solar  income, via agrarian or natural hunting and gathering modes of receiving  it plus your labor - man for man - woman for woman, labor. Slavery becomes the first energy hit to speed things up a bit.
The  next big energy hit is fossil fuels. Fossil fuels from the 1880's,  responsible for the explosion of all growth curves and consumption  curves we see in the world today. Impelled by and running parallel with a  pre-established ideology of economic growth, but the two much  reinforcing each other. Within that context, we have a number of  intellectual human beings especially of the occidental world that,  parallel with the world-wide spread of occidental trading habits, become  students of other peoples, and (without involving ourselves at this  point much into the argument of whether or not anthoropology is always  imperialism) we can't help but see it as a politically related factor.  The very fact of anthropological curiosity is a function of being a  member of an expanding civilization. The opposite of that, of the  contrast to that, is to be in a cultural situation where you will not  have any particular interest in what other peoples' cultural habits are,  but simply, hopefully, respect them. In Zen Buddhism they say, “mise  mono ja nai," which means this is not something we show to people. No  radio interviews, no tapings, no videos, no movies, no visitors are  permitted in Zen training establishments. It's not for show. It's open  to everyone who wishes to participate but it's not for show. That is the  sense that insiders have in their own culture as members. They see  people who come to them wanting to study (but not participate) as  strangely floating around the surface. We can begin to imagine how weird  our anthropological efforts must look to people who are in that other  kind of culture which is ecosystem based and deeply rooted in its own  identity while not doubting in the least the
humanity of other human beings. 
Now I'd like to tackle this thing about “combat cultural genocide." How do we combat cultural genocide? Has Alcheringa combatted  cultural genocide within the last _ve years? Have any of us in any  focussed way combatted cultural genocide? Where is cultural genocide  taking place? Let's take Brazil. In a recent issue of Critical Anthropology, the magazine of Marxist anthropology that Dr. Diamond has been associated with over the last few years from the New  School, we have an article where Dr. Jack Stauder makes these  suggestions to fellow teachers about how to take certain simple academic  steps in the right direction. He says, if you're going to be an  anthropology teacher you should also be able to teach your students the  dynamics of their own culture, at least in the critical area of  understanding imperialism and capitalism. If you can't communicate that  to your students, the you've got no business talking to them about the  Xingu. If you can't explain the banking system, well, where are you? He  says an anthropologist should be able to teach members of an oppressed  culture the dynamics of imperialism, and useful economic understanding,  in so far as they want to learn it. I know people who don't want to put  their heads into those occidental categories, but if they want to learn  they should be helped. It's the di_erence between being victimized or  being the master of the situation: to simply understand how things work.  Dr. Stauder suggests that an anthropologist should play an active  political role in society. And that we should ally ourselves to peoples'  struggle everywhere. 
Brazil  is only one case in point on the globe but a very instructive one.  People are of course oppressed everywhere and the destruction of small  traditions is taking place in countries of all degrees of complexity.  The Brazilian case is touching because it's probably there that the last  primary human beings in the world live: a few small groups, apparently,  that have not yet been contacted by expanding civilization. Two hundred  and _fty known tribes existed in Brazil in 1900: eighty-seven have  become extinct. Between 1900 and 1957 the Indian populations in Brazil  dropped from over one million to less than two hundred thousand persons.  The population of Brazilian Indians in the Amazon basin is now  estimated at less than _fty thousand. Nambiquara, Cintas Largas,  Kadiweu, Bororo, Waura, for example. This destruction is backed by large  multi-national corporations; the second largest investor in Brazil is  Volkswagen. Volkswagen apparently does not want to convert all its  western hemisphere profits all back into Euro-dollars, so it's heavily  invested in the development of cattle range in the Brazilian jungle,  destruction of forests and replacement of that by grasses to feed the  a_ent taste for beef of the people of North America. Another is Georgia  Pacific, in timber, a company which is also deforesting some of the  finest remaining virgin tropical forests of the Phillipines on contracts  with the Phillipine government. Rio Tinto Zinc; Litton Industries doing  aerial surveys and mapping; Caterpillar Tractor in vast contracts for  pushing out the jungle, going directly across the Xingu park. The  Brazilian o_cial statement is, “We think the only way for the Indians to  improve their health, education and begin self-development is through  development." Now, before you laugh, ask yourself this question: Do you  have a good answer to that argument? Do you want to take the position  that the Indians of Brazil should be placed in a national park with a  fence around it and have absolutely no contact with the civilized world  at all? How do you answer that? I know as a student of anthropology in  the 1950's I became convinced (following along the lines of what my  teachers were saying) that the traditional cultures of the world were  doomed. We could study them, we could try to preserve what we could _nd  of their languages, customs, myths, folktales, ethno-botanic knowledge  and so forth, but it would be quixotic to think that we should invest  any political e_ort in the actual defense of their cultural integrity  because the assumption was almost automatic that there was a melting pot  process of assimilation (that was probably o.k.) underway and what we  had to look for at the other end of the tunnel was a hopeful,  international, one world, humane modernism, fuelled with liberal and  Marxist ideas. But Marxists, granted the precision of their critique on  most points, often have a hard time thinking clearly about primitive  cultures, and the usual tendency is to assume that they should become  civilized. Right? So I'll come back in a moment to what I think is maybe  one way to approach an answer to that question, why do you say that  they should be developed? You want to keep them from having aspirin? Or  is it even possible?
These  strange contradictions. In Argentina there's a national park. One of  the groups of the Mapuche lives there. The forest huts are  deteriorating, not owing to laziness but because the park services  decrees that no wood may be cut or gathered by the Indians. Surrounded  by the forest yet disallowed wood and _ned if they should dare to cut  any. The government provides bundled firewood, but never enough. 
These  are quotations from Argentina, but I have heard the same thing said in  Montana, Utah, Nevada, central Oregon and so forth. Talking about the  people called the Mapuche. A colonel of German origin. “Are you going to  write about them? They're alcoholics and they sleep with their own  daughters." A store owner of Arab origin, “But don't worry for them. I  hope they die. You had better concern yourself that there will be a good  road built." A restaurant owner, “I don't understand them. They starve  but they are also so proud that they don't want to become dishwashers." A  lawyer with a tourist agency, “The Curruhincas live marvelously without  any shortages at all, by God, you and I would wish we had the same." A  high o_cial of Park Nationale, “What do you want to say about  prohibiting their goats? What we want is to throw them out of here. They  are lazy, had bad customs and are dirty. What a spectacle for the  tourists. We are studying a project of displacement to another part of  the region where they can live as they wish without problems." 
The  official didn't mention that any other region in Neuquen province is  desert, bleak and barren, and besides the Curruhinca Mapuche belong and  are acknowledged as such under Argentinian law in the area of Lake  Lacar.1 
One  of the criteria that can be brought to bear against the destructive  aspect of industrial civilization is ecological. It has to do simply  with this question of the reduction of diversity. I noticed some  comments earlier in this conference by some people that seem to at least  imply to me that they were in favor of, and assumed that, a kind of  one-world assimilation of languages and cultures or, you know, some kind  of internationalization, was a desirable process. The ecological  critique goes like this, (I quote from Roy Rappaport, “Flow of Energy in  an Agricultural Society"): “It may not be improper to characterize as  ecological imperialism the elaboration of a world organization that is  centered in industrial society and degrades the ecosystems of the  agrarian societies it absorbs. The increasing scope of world  organization and the increasing industrialization and energy consumption  on which it depends have been taken by western man to virtually define  social evolution and progress. What we have called progress or social  evolution may be maladaptive. We may ask if the chances for human  survival might not be enhanced by reversing the modern trend of  successions in order to increase the diversity and stability of local,  national, and regional ecosystems even, if need be, at the expense of  the complexity and interdependence of international world-wide  organizations. It seems to me that the trend toward decreasing ecosystem  complexity and stability, rather than threats of pollution,  overpopulation or even energy famine, is the ultimate ecological problem  confronting man. Also, the most difficult to solve, since the solution  cannot be reconciled with the values, goals, interests, political and  economic institutions prevailing in industrialized and industrializing  societies."
I  was talking about economic growth the other day to a young woman. And  she said, “But all life is growth; that's natural, isn't it?" So I had  to explain this, following Ramon Margalef and others: Life moves in  certain kinds of cycles, and after an occasion of disruption or  turbulence, it rapidly replaces the disturbed fabric, but initially with  a small number of species. As the fabric is repaired, species diversity  begins to replace single species rapid growth, and increasing  complexity becomes again the model, what they call \tending toward  climax" resulting in the condition called climax. That is, maximum  diversity and maximum stability in a natural system. Stable because  there are so many interlocking points that one kind of, as they say,  insult to the system does not go through too many pathways, but is  localized and corrected. If you have a field of nothing but grass, and  grasshoppers land on it, that's the end of your grass. If you have an  acre of which grass is maybe 12% of the biomass, then the grasshoppers  hit 12% of the biomass, but you still have the other 88%. That's all.  The support implicit in that, the richness implicit in that and also the  richness of the recycling of energy through the detritus pathways  (organic matter on the downswing rather than on the upswing, the fungi,  insects, etc., that live in the rotten wood and the rotten leaves rather  than live off the annual production of new biomass.) Detritus is a key  to that stability and maturity. 
Now,  in Dr. Eugene Odum's terms, what we call civilization is an early  succession phase; immature, monoculture system. What we call the  primitive is a mature system with deep capacities for stability and  protection built into it. In fact, it seems to be able to protect itself  against everything except white sugar and the money economy trading  relationship; and alcohol, kerosene, nails, and matches. (It was John  Stuart Mill who said, “No labor-saving invention ever really saved  anybody any labor.")
So:  ethnopoetics, first as a field. The politics of inventing a new  academic field. Politics of having a magazine. Politics of having a  conference like this. That's just a little footnote on academic life in  America, and that we do these things. I say this jokingly because I'm  grateful for what Jerome and Dennis have done; I'm grateful for having  been brought here today. That's one level. The next level is  “ethnopoetics" and that is, what we do when we start going into other  peoples' cultures and bringing back their poems and publishing them in  our magazines? I'll argue the positive side of that and it's simply  this. And expansionist imperialist culture feels most comfortable when  it is able to believe that the people it is exploiting are somehow less  than human. When it begins to get some kind of feedback that these  people might be human beings like themselves it becomes increasingly  difficult.
Collections  of American Indian mythology, folklore, and song go back to the 1880's.  The quantity becomes really large after around 1900 | Annual Reports  and Bulletins of the Bureau of American Ethnology, the American  Ethnological Society, the Memoirs and Journal of the American Folklore  Society, and so forth. A large body of American Indian literature in  English, but almost no publication of it in forms which are easily  available to large numbers of people. I ask why. I don't know; it may be  just market economy at work, and nobody wanted to read that sort of  thing. It may be that no one wanted it to be available outside a  scholarly circle.
A  similar case: the Ainu and the people of Japan. Dr. Kindaichi and his  associates began collecting Ainu oral literature in the 1930's, one of  the largest single bodies of oral literature that's ever been collected;  in Japanese translation from Ainu. I find no popular Japanese  publication of any of that material through the earlier decades: it was  just last year that the first easily available paperback of a selection  of the oral literature collected by Dr. Kindaichi and his associates has  come out. Until now it was buried in very expensive rare scholarly  books. The Iwanami Bunko series of paperbacks, about fifty cents a  volume; have translations of all the literatures in the world |  Dostoevski, Tolstoy, they've got it all in Japanese translation. So the  publishing capacity was there. Why didn't it happen? Why did it just  happen now? What will the recent publication of the Villas Boas  brothers' book on the Xingu do for the Brazilian Indians? It will  probably help. A few people will read that and begin to think, \These  are human beings." So there is some tiny increment of political value  from the publication of oral literatures.
For  most of the 40,000 year time span, people weren't particularly  selfconscious about their own body of songs, myths, and tales, but we  have some illuminating cases from the 19th century illustrating how  publication of ethnical literature reinforces a people's own sense of  identity. Take Finland. A young doctor named Lonnrat set himself to  walking widely through the northern parts of Finland, collecting the  remaining fragments of songs and epics and tales that the people were  still telling in the early 19th century. He strung those together in an  order which he more or less perceived himself, and called it the  Kalevala. It became overnight the Finnish national epic and helped the  Finns hold up against the Swedes on one side and the Russians on the  other. It may well be that Dr. Lonnrat's walking around in the  summertime is responsible for the fact that there's a nation called  Finland today. 
Point 4 in the Alcheringa 8-point list was “encouraging ethnologists and linguists to do work." Something happens when you do that work.
In  March, 1902. Alfred Kroeber was in Needles, California. He says: “At  Ah'a-kwinyevai, in a sand-covered Mohave house, we found Inyo-Kutavére,  which means `Vanished-Pursue'... he went on for six days, each of three  to four hours total narration by him and as many hours of translation by  Jack Jones and writing down by me. Each evening, he believed, I think  honestly, that one more day would bring him to the end. He freely  admitted, when I asked him, that he had never told the story through  from the beginning to the end. He had a number of times told parts of it  at night To Mohave audiences until the last of them dropped off to  sleep. When our sixth day ended he still again said another day would  see us through. But by then I was overdue at Berkeley. And as the  prospective day might once more have stretched into several, I  reluctantly broke off, promising him and myself that I would return to  Needles when I could, not later than next winter, to conclude recording  the tale. By next winter Inyo-Kutav_ere had died and the tale thus  remains unfinished... He was stone blind. He was below the average of  Mohave tallness, slight in figure, spare, almost frail with age, his  gray hair long and unkempt, his features sharp, delicate, sensitive...  He sat indoors on the loose sand oor of the house for the whole of the  six days that I was with him in the frequent posture of Mohave men, his  feet beneath him of behind him to the side, not with legs crossed. He  sat still but smoked all the Sweet Caporal cigarettes I provided. His  house mates sat around and listened or went and came as they had things  to do."2 That old man sitting in the sand house telling his story is who we must become - not A. L. Kroeber, as fine as he was. 
What  I want to talk about now is not the poetry of others, “ethnoi," but the  poetry of ourselves. Diné poetry, people-poetry, Maidu poetry, human  being poetry. In the 40,000 year time scale we're all the same people.  We're all equally primitive, give or take two or three thousand years  here or a hundred years there. Homer then, from this standpoint, is not  the beginning of a tradition but the end of a tradition. Homer  incorporates and organizes the prior eight thousand years of oral  material like the scribes who put the Japanese lore into writing  finally. Homer launches those things again forward for another couple of  thousand years so that we still have Ajax cleaning powder and Hercules  blasting powder. Some kind of looping.
I  was impressed by Levi-Strauss' opinion that everything has gone  somewhat downhill in western culture since the neolithic. He also argues  that writing systems have served largely through history to enslave men  rather than to serve any useful religious, spiritual or esthetic  purpose, since the original use of writing was to write down lists of  slaves and to keep an account of what you had in your warehouse, and  only much later became used in these other ways. However, the economic  anthropologist Marshall Sahlins has changed my mind because he says the  paleolithic is where it's at. As mentioned earlier, ecological criteria  are moving in this direction also. According to Sahlins' research, Stone Age Economics,  the upper paleolithic was the original a_uent society, and he estimates  that they worked an average of 15 hours a week. Sahlins says, “if you  are willing to grant that paleolithic hunters were in business for their  health, then the bow and arrow served their needs." \In those societies  nobody had very much but there were no poor people. There is no class  of landless paupers in primitive culture. Landless paupers belong to  civilization." This is also interesting: the average intake of proteins,  carbohydrates and all nutrients per day is higher for a primitive  person and probably for an archaic person than it was for the vast  population of serfs and peasants under the high civilized regimes. The  Chinese, who looked down the Tibetans so much, were not themselves aware  of the fact that the average nutrition for a Chinese person was far  below the average nutrition for a Tibetan person living as a nomad in  those barren upland wastes. 
So,  what is this poetics then that starts back there? Like Dr. Diamond  said, primary experience. Our hands got this way by doing certain things  a long time. The hand must still do those things or it isn't what it  can be. Beautiful little system. This is the origin of language and  poetry from the standpoint of India: Brahma, the creator, is in a  profound state of trance. He is silence, stillness. A thought moves  somewhere in there. It manifests itself as song, the goddess Vak. The  goddess Vak becomes the universe itself as energy. Of that energy all  sub-energies are born. Now, Vak, in Indo-European philology is the same  as the Latin “vox" of the English “voice." This goddess takes on another  name: she's also called Sarasvati, which means “the owing one," and  she's recognized today in India as the goddess of poetry, music and  learning. She's represented as wearing a white sari, riding a peacock,  carrying the vina and a scroll. 
In  the primal days of that energy ow, language was just “seed syllables."  The practice of mantra chanting in India, which is the chanting of those  seed syllables, is conceived of as being a way to take yourself back to  fundamental sound-energy levels. The sense of the universe as  fundamentally sound and song, begins poetics. They also say in Sanskrit  poetics that the original poetry is the sound of running water and the  wind in the trees.
There  is sacred song and secular song. In the case of sacred song there are  two categories: songs which are made of magic syllables and have magical  meaning only, and sacred songs which have literal meaning. In the  category of secular song, you can think of all the songs of all the  people of the world as going through divisions like these: lullabies to  sing babies to sleep; playground rhymes for kids; power vision songs of  adolescent initiation; courting songs of young people; work songs |  net-hauling, hammer-swinging, rice transplanting, canoeing, riding,  hunting songs, with a speci_c magical set of skills and understandings;  celebration songs, war songs, death songs. We can fit all of our own  poetries into these.
One  other category which is critical is “healing songs," because out of the  healing songs, songs that were obtained by people who got particularly  strong power vision songs and went back for more, evolved  specialization: that is to say, the specialization of the shaman or  medicine person as a singer/healer. That comes to us in history as the  fellows Plato wanted to kick out. Now, I like to think that the concern  with the planet, with the integrity of the biosphere, is along and  deeply-rooted concern of the poet for this reason: the role of the  singer was to sing the voice of corn, the voice of the Pleiades, the  voice of bison, the voice of antelope. To contact in a very special way  an “other" that was not within the human sphere; something that could  not be learned by continually consulting other human teachers, but could  only be learned by venturing outside the borders and going into your  own mind-wilderness, unconscious wilderness. Thus, poets were always  \pagans," which was why Blake said Milton was of the devil's party but  he didn't know it. The devil is, after all, not the devil at all, he is  the miming elk shaman dancer at Trois Fréres, with elk antlers and a  pelt on his back, and what he's doing has to do with animal fertility in  the springtime.
At  very bottom is the question, \how do you prepare your mind to become a  singer." How to prepare your mind to be a singer. An attitude of  openness, inwardness, gratitude; plus meditation, fasting, a little  suffering, some rupturing of the day-to-day ties with the social fabric.  I quote again from the Papago: “a man who desires song did not put his  mind on words and tunes. He put it on pleasing the supernaturals. He  must be a good hunter or a good warrior.
Perhaps  they would like his ways. And one day in natural sleep he would hear  singing. He hears a song and he knows it is the hawk singing to him of  the great white birds that y in from the ocean. Perhaps the clouds sing  or the wind or the feathery red rain spider on its invisible rope. The  reward of heroism is not personal glory nor riches. The reward is  dreams. One who performs acts of heroism puts himself in contact with  the supernatural. After that, and not before, has fasts and waits for a  vision. The Papago holds to the belief that visions do not come to the  unworthy, but to the worthy man who shows himself  humble there comes a dream and the dream always contains a song."3
The  symbolism of the muse, the goddess, is strong in our occidental  tradition and it's also strong in the Sanskrit and Tamil traditions of  India. The Chinese tradition is somewhat different but has very  interesting contacts with a kind of muse point of view that very early  that became covered over: It's in Taoism, and within the emphasis on the  female, the feminine, the spirit of the valley, the yin. Taoism being, following Dr. Joseph Needham's assessment of it in Science and Civilization in China,  the largest single chunk of matrilineal descent, mother consciousness  -oriented, neolithic culture that went through the, so to speak, sound  barrier of civilization in the Iron Age and came out the other side  halfway intact. Thus through its whole political history it has been  anti-feudal and antipatriarchal, so much so that Dr. Needham says that  in a way Taoism was a 2,000 year-long holding action for the Chinese  communist revolution. Dr, Needham is a bio-chemist from England.
Our  own mythology - mostly accepted on faith | is the scientific view of  the universe. There's an interesting convergence that I want to develop a  bit now, which is delightful. It's the Gaia Hypothesis. The  earth-goddess again. Two scientists, James Lovelock and Sidney Epton, in  England, have done a paper called “The Quest for Gaia." Gaia, in Greek  mythology, is the original earth-goddess sprung from Chaos, who produced  Uranus, mated with Uranus, mothered Chronos, the Titans, the Cyclops  and the Giants, and then the next generation was the first generation of  gods. 
The  Gaia hypothesis is a biochemists' hypothesis, that the whole of the  biosphere is one living organism which has strategically programmed its  evolution for 3 billion years, including producing us. (Which may have  been its one mistake.) One of the most interesting evidences of this  kind of work is the releasing of oxygen into the atmosphere by oceanic  micro-organisms, creating first an oxygen environment but then also by a  breakdown of certain oxygen molecules creating the ozone shield  screening ultra-violet rays, permitting cells to move out onto the land.  As cells get out onto the land, more oxygen, more ozone shield is  created, thus increasing the possibility of the spread of life. “Thus,  green plants not only get the benefit of carbon dioxide but also are  warmed by the radiant ux returned to the ground by the atmosphere. The  atmosphere's window on space is transparent to visible light but is  closed at the ultraviolet end by ozone absorption and carbon dioxide and  water vapor. This grand scale synergy of green plants in the atmosphere  is the result of millions of years of evolution of life and of the  atmosphere which are therefore closely interdependent."4 The  atmosphere is the creation of life for its own uses. Hence, the planet  earth looks like a nacreous shell from outer space such as that which  Venus might have stepped out of. 
Poetics  of the earth. Concentrations of communication-energy result in  language, certain kinds of compressions of language result in  mythologies; compression of mythologies brings us to songs. “The  transmission" - this is Dr. H. T. Odum - “the transmission of  information is an important part of any complex system. Small energy  flows that have high amplification factors have value in proportion to  the energies they control. As the smallest of energy flows, information  pathways may have the highest value of all when they open work gate  valves on power circuits. The quality of this information, tiny energies  in the right form, is so high that in the right control circuit it may  obtain huge amplifications and control vast power ows."5 In  the great universe, the main “theme" of energy flow is in massive  objects coming together realizing their own gravity. Solar radiation per  square meter out in space is 1.395. 99.98% of the energy influx on the  earth is solar. The tiniest fraction of that is captured by the  chlorophyll of plant leaves. Here's the poetics: “Morowitz has presented  the case, in thermodinamics, for the hypothesis that a steady flow of  energy from the inexhaustible source of the sun to the un_llable sink of  outer space, by way of the earth, is mathematically destined to cause  the organization of matter into an increasingly ordered state. The  resulting balancing act involves the ceaseless clustering of bonded  atoms into molecules of higher and higher complexity and the emergency  of cycles for the storage and release of energy. In a non-equilibrium  steady state, which is postulated, the solar energy would not just flows  to the earth and radiate away; it's thermodinamically inevitable that  it must rearrange matter into symmetry, away from probability, against  entropy, lifting it so to speak into a constantly changing condition of  rearrangement and molecular ornamentation. If there were to be sounds to  represent this process, they would have the arrangement of the  Brandenburg concertos, but I'm open to wondering whether the same events  are recalled by the rhythms of insects, the long pulsing runs of bird  songs, the descants of whales, the modulated vibrations of millions of  locusts in migration."6
That  is, you know, on some subliminal level what we're tuned into | for our  language, for our songs. It keeps bringing us back around to earth: I'm  going to quote one which you all know. “Don Juan squatted in front of  me. He caressed the ground gently. `This is the predilection of the two  warriors, this earth, this world. For a warrior there can be no greater  love. Only if one loves this earth with unbending passion can one  release one's sadness. A warrior is joyful because his love is  unalterable and his beloved the earth embraces him and bestows on him  gifts. This lovely being, which is alive to its last recesses and  understands every feeling, soothed me, cured me of my pains and finally  when I had understood my love for it, it taught me freedom.' "7
Now,  looking at our poetry of North America | Turtle Island | in the light  of the past, of other traditions, and this old new sense of the Earth,  it seems to me that we are just beginning. It wasn't until the 3rd  century A.D. in China that landscape poetry began to emerge, poetry  which developed over a number of centuries and ultimately ampli_ed,  informed, explored the seasons, the rivers, the waterfalls, the  mountains, creating a lore of reference and allusion to plants, each in  their season, and the qualities of those seasons in relations to human  affairs.
We're  just starting, in the last ten years here, to begin to make songs that  will speak for plants, mountains, animals and children. When you see  your first deer of the day you sing your salute to the deer, or your  first red-wind blackbird - I saw one this morning! Such poetries will be  created by us as we reinhabit this land with people who know they  belong to it; for whom “primitive" is not a word that means past, but primary, and future.  They will be created as we learn to see, region by region, how we live  speci_cally (plant life!) in each place. The poems will leap out past  the automobiles and TV sets of today into the vastness of the Milky Way  (visible only when the electricity is turned down), to richen and  humanize the scienti_c cosmologies. These poesies to come will help us  learn to be people of knowledge in this universe in community with the  other people | non-human included | brothers and sisters. 
[Based on a talk given at the Ethnopoetics conference at the University of Winscosin, Milwaukee, April 1975.]
by Gary Snyder 
1Information on South America from various publications of the Indigena group (P.O. Box
4073, Berkeley, CA. 94704)
2A. L. Kroeber, \A Mohave Historical Epic," Anthropological Records, 11.2 (Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1951), p. 71.
3Ruth Underhill, Singing for Power (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1968), p. 7.
4David M. Gates, \The Flow of Energy in the Biosphere," Energy and Power (N.Y.: Scienti
_c American, 1971), p. 45.
5H. T. Odum, Environment, Power, and Society (N.Y.: John Wiley, 1971), p. 172.
6Lewis Thomas, The Lives of a Cell (N.Y.: Viking Press, 1974), pp. 27{28.
7Carlos Castaneda, Tales of Power (N.Y.: Simon & Schuster, 1974), p. 285.
 
 
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