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Scatterlings: Being claimed by stories


Dartmoor


In a time of resurgent nationalism, what does it mean to belong to a place, be claimed by a place?


For one thing the currency must be smaller than that of a nation state. It must be, say, a particular clump of trees, nestling as a copse against a ruined castle, dripping with local stories of ghosts or a narrow, winding, stream-filled vale from which an especial eerie raven watches your descent from a granite rock. It must be a place, actually loved, coming to be known, as far as any place can be, as a person listens, attentively, to its stories and allows those stories to begin to rise up and begin their telling in them, through them.

For it is only in these ways that you can come to realize that a place is not yours for the taking, assimilating it wholly to your needs, even for healing, but a place that breaks you open, shatters the narrow confines of your present self, and makes you something different, wider, deeper, more alive. More alive precisely because one of the things you come to realize is that any story in a place belongs to all its inhabitants from stone to plant to animal. You learn that everything is animate to a story. Everything is telling.

Such is the theme of Martin Shaw's 'Scatterlings: Being Claimed in a Time of Amnesia' that completes his trilogy of wondering, wonderful books on the art and necessities of storytelling - the craft that he professes, protests. In it he turns away from the wider inheritance of story to the particularities of his place - in his case of Dartmoor and its edges in Devon in the south west of England. It is a turning of some urgency (and some difficulty). Urgent because though we can collect 'story' from anywhere - the bulging anthologies of myth and folktale - there is a temptation to the exotic - Siberia or the Amazon anyone -and we do this at a potential cost.

We forget our places, we lose the threads that weave in and out of our localities - and in doing so the story is diminished because they live in the telling, emerging out of place, more readily than they do from the pages of a book. A story should lay claim to us, as an embodied soul, a weave on the weft of the world, my world, here and now, amongst the known, familiar and break us open and vulnerable to its mystery, its living, its storytelling.

The difficulty (as David Abram notes in his preface) is that any embodying of this storytelling tradition in a book (even as one so accomplished and inviting) risks embalming what ought to be oral and ingested, dancing out of the rocks, shrubs, landscape itself. It is in danger of becoming yet another literary consumable, resting on the page, torn from place.


If Shaw's book 'works' (and he is a mesmerising storyteller both on and off the page as, having heard him, round a fire, I can attest), one should immediately put the book aside and pull on your boots and wander off down the lane, senses open, intuition alive, to welcome what story comes with the appropriate balance of welcoming and fear.


For one of the many virtues of the book is to remind you that the aim of a story is living meaning, not personal fulfilment or the shallows of happiness, and what the world wants of us is love and fealty and caring work; and, moving towards that can be costly as well as compelling. We are there for it, a part of it, not it for we. And in this Shaw's work is fundamentally ecological - where do we find our meaningful niche - for in that way lies the depth of life.




Comments

  1. Thank you for the heads up, Nicholas. After so many years studying history, and believing in history, I am developing (a very healthy) skepticism. Just because it is written, etc.... Oral stories are like perennial borders: they are the blossoming of a culture; when they die down you think that culture is dead, but then comes spring. I see the sign of spring everywhere, for the resurgent soul of this country, and it has nothing to do with Leave or Remain. It's just another flowering. I'm putting this book on my list.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I trust you will enjoy it. I was struck with its radical stance of listening to one's place and allowing the stories to emerge.

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