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Although mostly concealed, our bedrock geology profoundly
determines what we see around us - not just our landforms, but the
built environment too, from Aberdeen, often called the "granite
city" to Bath, constructed from honey-coloured limestone- rocks
shape the world around us. In Cornerstones, some of Britain's
leading landscape and nature writers consider their relationship
with the ground beneath their feet. Distinguished by a strong sense
of place and close observation, these essays take the reader out
into the landscape and convey the tactile heft, grain and rub of
the rock, showing how it shapes our familiar landscapes. Adapted
from the successful BBC Radio Three series, Cornerstones explores
how different rock types give rise to their own distinct flora and
fauna, and even affect the food we eat.
Stone Talks brings together poems and four talks/essays by noted
poet Alyson Hallett on the subject of stones, rocks, somatics and
our relationship with our environment. The book invites us to
listen again to the world around us - the world of rocks and trees
and sky and stars and sea that we participate in and that
participates in us. It reawakens a childlike curiosity in us, makes
connections that we had forgotten, and gives us permission to
experience the world in an embodied and vibrant way that was
drummed out of the rest of us long ago. The book starts with an
essay on KInship inspired by Donna Haraway's ideas about how we
must make relationships of kin with all things, including what she
refers to as `critters’. In it, Alyson explores the twin ideas of
embodied reading and embodied walking. How, exactly, can we embody
the ideas in a book? Here, the author "dives into kinship with the
decomposed bodies of plankton, plants and animals whose liquidation
created that beautiful, black viscous gold we call oil". In the
title essay, Stone Talks, Alyson revisits the keynote lecture she
gave at the `In Other Tongues’ symposium at Dartington. In it she
explores her lived experience of being talked to and guided in her
life by stones. She examines the ideas of obedience and yielding,
the body as a wilderness, and unfolds a walked artwork with stones
that she undertook soon after her father died. In Haunted
Landscapes, Alyson explores the marks and traces of our own and
others' lives that inhabit our bodies and experience. Wandering
into quantum physics, she asks questions that "set me afloat on a
fathomless sea". Finally, in The Stone Monologues, Alyson embarks
on a quest to "understand myself not as a single thing, a single
point, but rather a constellation, a layered interruption in time
comprising everyone and everything I encounter". Alyson Hallett has
received Arts Council awards for her work. She is a Hawthornden
Fellow, works part-time for the Royal Literary Fund and loves
collaborating with other artists and scientists. She has a
doctorate in poetry with research into geographical intimacy. In
Stone Talks, she shares some of what she is learning from stones.
She talks “from the mud. From the earth. From the place we haunt
and are haunted by.” The talking is exquisite.
In a 1934 lecture, Marcel Mauss said: "A kind of revelation came to
me in hospital. I was ill in New York. I wondered where previously
I had seen girls walking as my nurses walked. I had the time to
think about it. At last I realised that it was at the cinema.
Returning to France, I noticed how common this gait was, especially
in Paris; the girls were French and they too were walking in this
way. In fact, American walking fashions had begun to arrive over
here, thanks to the cinema." Here are the roots of contemporary
views of daily-life movement (including walking). We notice people
who don't walk normally. We notice ourselves when we don't walk
normally. There is, it seems, an intense, invisible pressure to
walk normally. Straight is the gait. Call it ambulonormativity. For
about 9 months, two walking-authors/artists - Alyson Hallett and
Phil Smith - found themselves wrestling with not being able to walk
normally. They wrote to one another about it and, amongst other
things, reflected on: prostheses waddling Butoh built-up shoes
walking in pain bad legs vertigo falling (and fallen) places hubris
bad walks scores for falling down walking carefully disappointment.
This is their conversation. From it, there emerges an 'Alphabet of
Falling', a sustained reflection on the loss of normal
capabilities, anecdotes and autobiographical stories, and the
beginnings of a larger discussion about srumbling and falling: the
pedestrian equivalent of blowing an uncertain trumpet. As the book
concludes: "When you next fall, stay down for a while, see what
comes. Then, when you get to your feet again, rather than relying
on your body's natural approximations of space, choose your steps,
not anxiously but in an excited kind of wariness; and, with each
pace, a little more undo the 'grounds' that tripped you up."
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