Black to the Land
A back to the land movement has existed for as long as people were
deserting the land to live in cities. Before agriculture and the rise
of civilization, everyone lived in small groups and foraged or hunted
for their sustenance from their natural surroundings. With
civilization came the State, a social entity that through the threat
of violence coerced all members of a society to adhere to its rule of
private property, a rule which resulted in the accumulation of wealth
by an elite. The desire to return to a primordial state of grace has
always remained strong, the oppressed classes continually resisted the
alienating, destructive forces of the bosses. In the 19th century,
revolutionary intentions of the masses were articulated by the
philosophies of anarchism and communism. Whereas the communists sought
to use the State to achieve its vision of a classless society,
anarchists wanted to do away with the State altogether in favour of a
voluntary co-operation among all members of society.
After a couple of world wars and many thwarted revolutions, it was
becoming obvious to many progressive thinkers that the State could not
be used to achieve the good society. Thinking that they could be the
change they wanted to see in the world, a number of people left the
cities to adopt rural lifestyles. The movement started becoming
obvious in the late 1960's when hippies started communes around the
world, following Timothy Leary's advice to "tune in, turn on and drop
out".
Course Description
The back-to-the-land movement itself did not change society and many
people who tried it returned to the city. It is still going strong and
pockets of such people in between cities are the nucleus of
progressive institutions such as women's shelters and coops. The area
around Killaloe is the source of Cool Hemp frozen desserts and Straight Goods news service.
This course is being called "black to the land" to denote that
re-connecting to the natural forces that sustain us is more
than a matter of individuals or
families raising their own food on a small farm. The end of humanity's
alienation from Nature will come about through people acting in
communities to realize their own dreams. Black is the colour
associated with anarchism and a network of communities and workers
collectives associating with each other is an essential tenet of the
anarchist vision. Black is also associated with earth, the source of
all our livelihoods.
So this is a practical course with the goal of enabling students to
seize the time. By co-operating with others of like mind in a rural
setting, they should eventually be part of an effort to build a new
world within the shell of the old one.
Given the climactic changes that we are witnessing and the financial
collapse that is imminent, we should act soon while we still have a
choice. It is well known, even among the elite, that the present
course of society is not sustainable so the question is - where will
we be and who will be around us when the complicated infrastructure
that now keeps things running breaks down?
Reading Material
The corpus of works that informs this subject is immense. My own
education started with reading about man's desecration of Nature and utopian
visions of correcting the problems. The book
Quest for Community by
Robert Nisbet was important to my understanding of modern alienation
and acceptance of anarchism as a viable philosophy.
Authors that are useful for conceptually placing ourselves in the
world during these changing times: Murray Bookchin, Jean-Paul Sartre,
Theodore Roszak, Starhawk, Wilhem Reich, Abbie Hoffman, Rudolph
Steiner, John Zerzan, William Blake, Germaine Greer,
W.I.Thompson. Adrienne Rich, bell hooks
Articles about Dragonfly Farm (that i am a member of) will be provided
experience there and that of resource persons from other intentional
communities will inform many of the presentations. Uprising Books has
copies available of
Kick it Over with my article "Dragonfly is 25"
in it.
Other useful materials and sources:
Directory of Intentional Communities, Celebrating Community website, ecovillages, Willing Workers on Organic Farms (WWOOF), green
anarchy, primitivism, permaculture, Whole Earth Catalogue, Earth
First, feminist science fiction, utopian novels, poetry. Handouts
being prepared are a
review of The Quest for Community, Bookchin's
"Ecology & Revolutionary Thought" and a communitarian timeline. A more
detailed reading list will be available to participants in the
course.
Course Outline
The course will be roughly structured to answer the 5 W's of forming
anarchist communities in a rural setting - Why, Who, What, When &
Where. Each class over the course of 10 weeks will delve into each W
and its antithesis. I plan to bring in guest speakers to help explore
the dimensions of going "black to the land".
Why - Anarchist communities as means to changing the world, Place to
be when society collapses, Creating healthy situations for selves &
future generations, Alternative to work & suburbs, Changing modes of
production
why not - Reasons for failure of previous attempts, Draining of other struggles,
Who - Structure of group, Decision making, Conflict Resolution,
Relations with other populations, Skill sets required, Children
who not - Sources of differences, Reasons for leaving, Problems of couples
What - Activities planning, Income generation, Infrastructure
creation, Food growing, Connections to city, Engagement with local issues
Halfway through the course, we have decided to engage in a game where we pretend that we have piece of land to work with. An old farm is southern Ontario will provide an opportunity for the class to figure out how to implement the dream of going back to the land.
About the Facilitator
Stu Vickars <edenvick@resist.ca>
I was one of the founders of Dragonfly Farm, an intentional community between Bancroft and Algonquin park that was settled in 1978 by people from the radical milieu of Kitchener/Waterloo. It was my home until the early nineties when a change in circumstances forced me to move to Toronto. Dragonfly continues to this day although not too many live there now. Anarchists from Toronto have bought a couple of properties next to Dragonfly and are bringing new energy to the area. My partner and i hope to move up there next year to contribute to Dragonfly and reap the rewards.
Stu
edenvick@resist.ca