Vegetal Delights: The Phytopoetics of Ross Gay
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Dandelions and Poetics
3. Making Growth Visible
It is truly overnight sometimes it seems that the dandelions put on their crowns, and just like that, the world is suddenly brighter, more abundant, more possible—this, of course, if you, like me, adore the dandelion, see their unmartial ranks suddenly outflanking the gloom, outflowering the doom, and if you, like me, make love (a little much?) with its absolutely usable body, body of utter benevolence, body of total beneficience, petite and profligate and gleeful lovenote: the roots for all kinds of medicine, not to mention your various probiotic, bitter, hot morning drinks (for the caffeine-weaning among us); the flowers, which are actually (get close—no closer—you’ll see what I mean) a million flowers, which the pollinators bloom into a winged dancefloor at our feet; and the leaves, little lion’s teeth, which, in addition to throwing them into your tomato sauce or greens or smoothie or black-eyed pea-fritters, you might do like this:(pp. 177–178)
4. Genre Formation
5. The Dandelion Giggling
6. Soundtracks and Missives
Maybe their prettiness, by which I really mean their beauty, is because their roots go so far down, they fathom the depths […], and those beautiful flowers are missives from the deep. Or the dark. Or the mystery. Or the unknown. Or the underworld. Whichever word we want to use today to mean the dead, or at least the dead-adjacent. Missives from the dead, these little festive blooms. To which, I don’t know about you, but I’m trying to listen.(p. 179)
7. Roots Are Stories
couples or enswirls or routes the path or way into the botanical (roots are avenues or roads, etc.), and makes the act of rooting (à la the botanical, searching in the dark for nutrients; à la pigs, searching for treasure with one’s snout or other appendage, often beneath something; and à la what I am doing for Bernardo right now: cheering) a story. Short form: roots are stories. We all know roots are resplendently, radically metaphorical, but thanks to Bernardoby’s poetic mistranscription, they are to me now even more so.
EAT CANDY! |
DESTROY THE STATE! ([2], p. 200) |
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1. | All of these examples are taken from The Book of (More) Delights [2]. |
2. | For an overview of Gay’s style and oeuvre so far, see Baker [3]. Other books by Gay, such as the essay collection Inciting Joy (2022) and the poetry volume Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude (2015), indicate the centrality of emotions like delight, joy, and gratitude in his work. |
3. | More recent editions of the first volume have different cover art, but it is all plant-themed and leafy. |
4. | |
5. | |
6. | The text is on pp. 177–179 in Gay 2023 [2] and is hereafter cited with page numbers in the text. |
7. | First, the time of plants is determined by their environment, leading to “the vegetal hetero-temporality of seasonal changes” ([20], p. 95); second, plants have unlimited potential to grow, or “the infinite temporality of growth” (p. 95); and third, “the cyclical temporality of iteration, repetition, and reproduction” (p. 95), which includes “the iterability of expression” (p. 112) of a plant when seasons or day/night change. |
8. | His ‘writing toward’ is reminiscent of Heinrich von Kleist’s essay on “The Gradual Production of Thoughts while Speaking” (1805-06 [21]), which describes how conversations can help clarify one’s thoughts, though Gay’s tool is, of course, writing, and it is not focused as much on “a solution” as Kleist. Rather, the process of “gradual production” is at the center of his texts and made visible. |
9. | This resonates with some of the reflections about what kind of literature we might need in our contemporary times in Olga Tokarczuk’s Nobel Prize lecture on “The Tender Narrator” [24], and the genre’s focus on the positive in the face of crisis as a response of resistance also evokes Rebecca Solnit’s 2004 book Hope in the Dark [25], which became a bestseller again in 2016. |
10. | As pollinators should be, the speaker of the delights is promiscuous when it comes to flower kissing, see, e.g., [2], p. 185. |
11. | For additional uses and the difficulty with shaking dandelion’s classification as a ‘weed,’ see “Dandelions” [27] by Aimee Nezhukumatathil, who also co-authored Lace & Pyrite: Letters from Two Gardens (2014) with Ross Gay. |
12. | |
13. | The 1977 TV miniseries Roots, based on a book by the same name [37], tells the story of Kunte Kinte, a young West-African man who is captured and sold as a slave in the US, and his ancestors into the present, all the way to the author himself. Despite issues with the veracity of the lineage, the novel and series became a cultural sensation and prompted widespread interest in African American genealogy and ancestry research. |
14. | Bernardo is a man with many nicknames, as we also learn from the delights. |
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Jacobs, J. Vegetal Delights: The Phytopoetics of Ross Gay. Philosophies 2024, 9, 185. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9060185
Jacobs J. Vegetal Delights: The Phytopoetics of Ross Gay. Philosophies. 2024; 9(6):185. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9060185
Chicago/Turabian StyleJacobs, Joela. 2024. "Vegetal Delights: The Phytopoetics of Ross Gay" Philosophies 9, no. 6: 185. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9060185
APA StyleJacobs, J. (2024). Vegetal Delights: The Phytopoetics of Ross Gay. Philosophies, 9(6), 185. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9060185