Speaking of Nature
"We have a special grammar for personhood. We would never say of our 
late neighbor, "It is buried in Oakwood Cemetery." Such language would 
be deeply disrespectful and would rob him of his humanity. We use 
instead a special grammar for humans: we distinguish them with the use 
of he or she, a grammar of personhood for both living and dead Homo 
sapiens. Yet we say of the oriole warbling comfort to mourners from the 
treetops or the oak tree herself beneath whom we stand, "It lives in 
Oakwood Cemetery." In the English language, a human alone has 
distinction while all other living beings are lumped with the nonliving 
"its." As a botany professor, I am as interested in the pale-green 
lichens slowly dissolving the words on the gravestones as in the 
almost-forgotten names, and the students, too, look past the stones for 
inky cap mushrooms in the grass or a glimpse of an urban fox." Robin 
Wall Kimmerer shares more on the grammar of animacy in this shimmering 
piece. 
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