by Nancy Corson Carter
One of the great gifts of PEC’s
conference for me was the discovery of Octavia E. Butler’s novel, The Parable of the Sower.
I learned of it through Dr. Faith Harris’s
presentation, “A Womanist and Interfaith Response to Climate Change:
Reimagining Our Collective Futures.”
Dr. Harris quoted Katie Geneva Cannon to introduce herself: “My
assignment as a womanist liberation ethicist is to debunk, unmask, and
disentangle the historically conditioned value judgements and power relations
that undergird the particularities of race, sex, class, and oppression.” (She
defines “womanist” as a liberation theology restoring dignity and
hope to women of color without being adversarial.)
In asking “What should people of faith and good conscience do?” Dr.
Harris argued that our faith tradition can change the narrative: “We can make the moral
argument to invest in people, in Earth.” So it seemed natural, now that I have
read The Parable, that she would celebrate this book.
Written in 1993 by a gifted prize-winning writer who’d grown up poor,
fighting the notion that “black women don’t
write,” the story begins in 2024. This dystopian work of science fiction
presents a world in chaos that we can recognize as already becoming true—it is
both prescient and prophetic.
The young woman protagonist, Lauren (the sower in hopes of
seeding good soil), is thrown into a deeply disturbing journey by violence. I
found that the nightmarish world she traverses (ostensibly the Pacific coast in
the future) is not unlike the Darién Gap, the dangerous link between Colombia
and Panama being risked now by hundreds of thousands of migrants set on finding
a better life in the North. Yet Earthseed: The Books of the Living threads
through the book in brief poetic-journal form at the beginning of each chapter
as her testimonial that there is a God who is our partner in this Earth through
change, “forever uniting, growing, dissolving.” She believes that
this God leads us, if we persist, toward loving, Earth-honoring community. The
book’s
final words quote the parable of the sower from Luke 8: 5-8 in the King James
Version of the Bible.
A main theme Dr. Harris
argued is that, “Our challenge is to interrupt the fossil fuel death
spiral” and to face our problem of a “theo-ethical premise” that individuals can own land and
push others out (stealing, killing, or enslaving them as in the Doctrine of
Discovery). She urged that the moral remedy is to bring God back to Earth: “God
is not outside us but within us and all Earth,” and our hope is to
create community wherever we are. She celebrates Parable of the Sower as
a work that gives her hope because “we are going to have to figure this out, to do it
together.” That we will do this is my hope as well.
Nancy Corson Carter, professor emerita of humanities at Eckerd College, has published two
poetry books, Dragon Poems and The Sourdough Dream Kit, and three poetry chapbooks.
Some of her poems, drawings, and photos appear in her nonfiction book, Martha,
Mary, and Jesus: Weaving Action and Contemplation in Daily Life and in her
memoir, The Never-Quite-Ending War: a WWII GI Daughter's Stories.
Check out the "Parable of the Sower" opera, with music and libretto by Bernice Johnson Reagon, of Sweet Honey and the Rock, and her multi-talented offspring, Toshi Reagon.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.parableopera.com/
Our organization, "Urban Farm and Garden Alliance," had the honor of being one of the co-costs, when the Concert Version was presented in St. Paul, MN on April 26, 2019. at O'Shaughnessy Auditorium, on the campus of St. Catherine's University, as a highlight of the "Earthseed Power Gathering, a group of coordinated events structured around anti-oppression and all forms of justice; e.g, environmental, food sovereignty, what we would now refer to as LGBTQIA2S+, feminism, violence prevention, and so on .
Toshi was center stage, as narrator and musical performer, surrounded by many other talented performers, both instrumental and vocal. It is an interactive performance, and the people in the audience participated wholeheartedly. What an inspiring and superlative experience!
In solidarity, peace and hope for the future,
Diane Dodge