Spoken Earth

#02 Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing: The mushroom at the end of the world

9 snips
Oct 9, 2019
In this discussion, Professor Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, an anthropology expert at UC Santa Cruz, dives into her book, highlighting the matsutake mushroom's surprising resilience in degraded landscapes. Tsing shares fascinating stories of mushroom pickers and the intricate global networks tied to this luxury product, challenging perceptions of decay and hope. The conversation also touches on the linked themes of migration, ecological practices, and the importance of active human involvement in nature, all while advocating for a deeper kinship with the environment.
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ANECDOTE

Southeast Asian Pickers in Oregon

  • Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing encountered Southeast Asian mushroom pickers in Oregon forests while exploring matsutake mushrooms.
  • Their camp scenes mirrored those she'd seen in Laos and Cambodia, full of migrants and war survivors adapting to new landscapes.
INSIGHT

Honest Engagement Without False Hope

  • The book is neither optimistic nor despairing but calls for honest description of our present.
  • Acceptance that there may not be a collective happy ending opens space for grounded engagement with ecological realities.
INSIGHT

Satoyama: Humans within Forests

  • Traditional Satoyama forestry in Japan integrates humans into forest ecology via selective work like coppicing.
  • This symbiotic human-nature relationship contrasts with wilderness ideals that exclude human activity and offers a model for sustainable coexistence.
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