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Walking on Water: Reading, Writing, and Revolution- A Review.
By Adam Fletcher
One of the most
important components of both education and activism is
contextualization. As Paulo Freire argued, learning must be
rooted in the context in which education takes place. For a
sixth-grader in the US, that would be their local community; for
a elderly person, that might be their family. For Derrick
Jensen, that place was in classrooms at a university and a
maximum security prison, where he was taught creative writing to
Washington state college students and prisoners convicted of
robbery, rape, and murder. In this book Jensen shares stories
from those places as a guise and guide for the larger lessons,
both hinted at and carefully detailed throughout this book.
The lessons here
are truly revolutionary. "As is true for most people I know,
I've always loved learning. As is also true for most people I
know, I always hated school. Why is that?" With this opening
line, Jensen begins a more-than-casual assault on traditional
schooling, railing on everything from classroom seating
arrangements to grading; from teaching methods to attendance.
The lessons here a resonant of the teachings of both John Holt
and John Taylor Gatto, the latter of whom Jensen credits
greatly, and they give anecdotal meaning to some of the wisdom
of by Grace Llewellyn and William Upski Wimsatt.
Through his
lessons, Jensen gives substance and validity to many peoples'
feelings of alienation and disconnectedness in school, and
offers a brilliant guide to creative writing along the way.
Jensen writes, "Throughout our adult lives, most of us are
expected to get to work on time, to do our boss's bidding...and
not to leave till the final bell has rung. It is expected that
we will watch the clock, counting seconds till five o'clock,
till Friday, till payday, till retirement, when at last our time
will again be our own, as it was before we began kindergarten,
or preschool, or daycare. Where do we learn to do all of this
waiting?" The answer, of course, is school. School is the
"day-prison" where we learn to be "a nation of slaves."
He then follows
this daring declaration with another story from his prison
experience, where he created "an atmosphere in which students
wish to learn...", which included asking both prisoners and
college students to be uncomfortable in their search for meaning
through writing. Throughout this book Jensen includes several
useful writing tips that offer a unique twist to this book:
while a significant diatribe against historical approaches to
education, it provides useful methods for self-education and
learning through life.
Ultimately Jensen
achieves Freire's challenge of sharing with students the goal of
"reading the word through the world," and in that is Jensen's
greatest success. This book is vitally important to any person
seeking inspiration for learning outside the lines, both for its
practical advice, and for the fact that it is coming from a
seasoned educator. I believe that it can also be important to
young people particularly, because through his intelligent,
accessible thinking, Jensen acknowledges what many youth
believe: school isn't relevant to young people today because
teachers can't be relevant to learning today. They just don't
know how. However, more importantly, Jensen himself disproves
that, and may actually inspire young readers to look into places
of higher education for the vital allyship and mentorship that
adult educators can potentially offer.
As Jensen ponders
the weight of the world throughout the book, including wrestling
with conservatism, hopelessness and apathy, war, and many other
feelings, he leaves readers with a challenging thought that
easily summarizes the motivation of this book, and lends this
book its essentialness in the activist library: "There is much
work to be done. What are you waiting for? It's time to begin."
It is time to
begin. Thank you, Derrick Jensen, for giving us a roadway to get
started.
Walking on Water: Reading,
Writing, and Revolution
Author: Derrick Jensen
Publisher: Chelsea
Green Publishing Company (2004)
ISBN: 1931498482
This review is also available
online at:
Powell's Bookstore
Chelsea Green Publishing
Education News
Independent Media Center newswire
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