Reviewed by Rebecca Johnson
Kathleen Jamie’s essay collection
begins with a vast silence, a freedom from all human and animal interference,
among the ice cliffs of Greenland. “A mineral silence that presses powerfully
on our bodies”, as she describes it. This silence forces you as a reader to
focus. It draws you into the place and her description of it, into your own
mind and senses, so that you become aware of yourself as a living body, and
into the book itself through her quiet style of delicate attentive listening
and precise observation. It creates an intensity that she sustains throughout,
as this is a book about listening and looking, sensing and perceiving at an
almost hypnotic level. It is a task that Jamie seems to suggest is the essence
of being alive, as it is for other living creatures: being in our animal
senses, experiencing and responding to the natural world. The visceral and
emotional awareness of bodies in landscape.
In essays ranging across her
native Scotland and its islands, to Shetland, the Orkneys and the Hebrides, and
further afield to a Norwegian whale museum and beyond, Kathleen Jamie explores
myth, history, scientific understanding, and cultural responses to the natural
world as well as her own sensory experiences. She sees it as a ‘conversation’,
a dialogue of co-existence in which she learns about her humanity – not always
a happy lesson, sometimes a brutal, shameful or humbling one – and the ways in
which people respond to and explore the non-human and the reasons why they do
so, as well as trying to understand the lives of the creatures she encounters.
She dismisses sentimental approaches to nature:
It’s ‘not all primroses and otters’, she points out, while examining
cancerous tissue with a hospital pathologist; she does not shy away from death
as part of life.
As you would expect of prose writing from a
poet, beautiful descriptions spangle her sentences. Writing of icebergs: ‘They
are a blue you could fall into, as you could have fallen forever into the
silence of the morning.’ Or of a gannet colony: ‘Here they were in the air,
gannet, gannet, repeated like a stammer, the whole idea of gannet amplified and
displayed.’ Or when she moves into the sublime, experiencing the evanescence
and transience of animate life in remote places: ‘I had the sensation I always
have on Atlantic islands, in summertime, when the clouds pass quickly and light
glints on the sea – a sense that the world is bringing itself into being moment
by moment. Arising and passing away in the same breath.’
This lyrical appreciation of the
natural world contains within it a subtle anger, a witnessing of loss, which is
also an awareness of time and the changes that have been wrought on bird
populations, animal and human communities. Yet here she doesn’t carry through
the implications of her observations to engage with political concerns: she
does not indulge in polemics. She is forever the observer, never involved or
passing judgement. Again, this may be a reflection of poetic technique, but I
found it frustrating in essay form that she did not pursue the potential of the
ideas latent in her descriptions, instead backing off into ambiguity, even
contradiction, or leaving underlying implications to hang. Only in her last
lengthy essay on whaling does she allow her views and emotions more scope.
Kathleen Jamie’s fascination
with, love for and awe of whales ripples throughout the book. She describes the
exhilaration of sighting killer whales off Rona; she cleans and admires whale
skeletons in the Hvalsalen in a Bergen museum, imagining herself into their
seaborne bodies; and, in ‘Voyager, Chief’ she visits whale jaw and vertebral
relics dotted around the Scottish landscape to tell the story of the now extinct
whaling industry – a history of which I was completely unaware. These remaining
artefacts have something akin to religious meaning for her and she sees them as
a form of atonement for the shame of the wholesale slaughter of these
awe-inspiring and magnificent creatures for whale oil and flesh.
This is a lovely book, full of gentle joy and anger and an almost spiritual
wonder for and affinity with the natural world. It is written in crystalline
language that enhances perception, and explores the essence, ultimately, of our
human existence in relation to the rest of the natural world.
I loved this book where you can learn so many things about the world and there many unspoken and unseen things to talk about with friends anyway, also I am taking help from essay writing services australia online to get my essay and writing things to get done without any errors as error gives less grades
ReplyDeletethe best thesis writing provide the best writing that helps you out for any education related problem, the thesis writing service provides the best writing that helps you out from university.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing this useful material. The information you have mentioned here will be useful. I would like to share with you all one useful source https://order-essays.com/buy-literary-analysis-essay which might be interesting for you as well.
ReplyDeleteHey i was searching through the net and accidentaly found your blog. Should say that it is excellent! Good info and you have the great talent to write, I see it cause I am a writer too and represent proffesional writing platfrom - https://papermasters.org/synopsis-writing
ReplyDeleteGrant winning Scottish artist and writer Jamie composes of her inundations in nature and history in 14 finely tooled, scoured, flushed, and cleaned papers. However adroitly bewildered as she may be eagerly attentive, Oil And Filter Change Service In Dubai however inventively interpretive as she seems to be interested, Jamie goes to the Arctic, where she contemplates time, unfathomability,
ReplyDeleteIn Sightlines, Kathleen Jamie reports from the field-from her local Scottish 'byways and slopes' to the cold Arctic in fourteen exciting expositions. VAT Accounting Software Dubai
ReplyDeleteShe takes apart whatever her look tons of cells underneath a medical clinic magnifying lens, orcas adjusting a headland, the aurora borealis illuminating the frozen ocean.