“Do I contradict myself? Very well, then I contradict myself; I am large, I contain multitudes.”—Walt Whitman
I was born on
this day, some sixty+ years ago, in the small town of Granby in the Eastern
Townships to German-Romanian parents. Besides its zoo—which my brother, sister
and I used to visit to collect bottles for a finder’s fee at the local treat
shop—the town had no particular features. It typified French-Canada of that
era. So did I. I went to school in Quebec then migrated across to the west
coast to practice and teach limnology. Given that Canada holds at any one time
a fifth of the Earth’s freshwater, that also made sense.
Canada is a vast country with
a climate and environment that spans from the boreal forests of the Canadian
Shield, muskegs of northern BC, and tundras of the Arctic Circle to the
grasslands of the Prairies and southern woodlands of Ontario and Quebec.
Canada’s environment is vast and diverse. Like its people.
In December of
2017 I participated in a discussion on the subject and role of water in
literature in Toronto. I came to the event as a limnologist/ecologist, mother and
environmentalist prepared to share how water—its meaning and our relationship
with it—is used in my writing and how writing about water can help nurture a
future of awareness and action. But, as the discussion slid into the slippery subject of colonialism,
I made the apparent mistake of sharing that—as a Canadian—I was proud of
Canada. I was later schooled that “celebrating the nation” was considered anathema
to an audience with strong anti-colonialist sentiments and a hatred for
neoliberalist corporate Canada (something I share but do not obsess over); I’d
obviously crossed some invisible line and I made a mental note to better assess
my audience in future). I also got to thinking about what it means for me to be
a Canadian and what my pride in Canada really means. Was I being a “white-toast”
nationalist in sharing a pride in my country?
Ecologist vs Nationalist
Ecology is the
study of “home” (oikos means ‘home’
in Greek). Ecology studies the relationships that make one’s home functional.
It is, in my opinion, the most holistic and natural way to assess where we live.
My home is currently Toronto, Ontario, Canada and ultimately the planet Earth.
Growing up in
the Eastern Townships of Quebec, I’d always felt an abiding sense of belonging
and I resonated with Canada’s national symbols—mostly based on Nature and found
on our currency, our flag, and various sovereign images: the loon, the beaver,
the maple tree, our mountains and lakes and boreal forests. Why not? Canadians
are custodians of a quarter of the world’s wetlands, longest river systems and
most expansive lakes. Most of us recognize this; many of us live, play and work
in or near these natural environments.
Nina and son Kevin explore Nature |
Merriam-Webster
defines “nationalism” as: “loyalty and devotion to a nation, especially a sense
of national consciousness.” This is not the same as patriotism. Nor does it
describe what many think of the word, which is an extreme form of nationalism,
in which one nation is exalted above all others (I can think of one nation that
is overtly doing that now) and placing primary emphasis on promoting its
culture and interests over others—often through isolationism, xenophobia,
chauvinism and jingoism. When I think of Canada, I think of my “home”, where I
live; my community and my environment. I have traveled the world and I feel a
strong sense of “home” and belonging every time I return. Canada is my home. I
was born and grew up in Quebec. I lived in British Columbia, Ontario, and Nova
Scotia; each of these places engendered a feeling of “home”. If a strong sense
of “home” and belonging is nationalistic, then that is what I am.
Nina kayaking in Desolation Sound, British Columbia |
Or am I
something else? Perhaps, we need to redefine our sense of belonging (and pride)
in a country that is not tied to some core political identity or melting-pot mainstream.
Historian and writer Charlotte Gray wrote:
“we live in a country that has a weak national culture and strong regional identities …Two brands of psychological glue bind Canada together: political culture and love of landscape…[in] a loose federation perched on a magnificent and inhospitable landscape—[we are] a nation that sees survival as a collective enterprise.”—Charlotte Gray
Canada as Postnational State
In October
2015, Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told the New York Times that Canada may be the “first postnational state,”
adding that “there is no core identity, no mainstream in Canada.” This is
largely because Canadians, writes Charles Forman in the Guardian, are “philosophically predisposed
to an openness that others find bewildering, even reckless.”
To anyone but
a Canadian, Trudeau’s remark would rankle, particularly in a time when many
western countries are fearfully and angrily turning against immigration through
nativism and exclusionary narratives. A time when the United States elected an
authoritarian intent on making “America great again” by building walls. A time
when populist right-wing political parties hostile to diversity are gaining
momentum in other parts of the world. “Canada’s almost cheerful commitment to
inclusion might at first appear almost naive,” writes Forman. It isn’t, he
adds. There are practical reasons for keeping our doors open.
We are who we are because of what we are: a vast country the size of Europe. A country dominated by boreal forest, a vital and diverse wilderness that helps maintain the well-being of our entire planet. A land that encompasses over a fifth of the freshwater in the world, and a quarter of the world’s wetlands. Canadians are ultimately the world’s Natural stewards. That is who and what we are.
According to Forman, postnationalism frames how “to understand our
ongoing experiment in filling a vast yet unified geographic space with the
diversity of the world” and a “half-century old intellectual project, born of
the country’s awakening from colonial slumber.” As the first Europeans arrived
in North America, the Indigenous people welcomed them, taught them how to
survive and thrive amid multiple identities and allegiances, writes Forman.
“That welcome was often betrayed, particularly in the 19th and 20th centuries,
when settlers did profound harm to Indigenous people.” But, says Forman, if the
imbalance remains, so does the influence: a model of another way of belonging.
One I think many Canadians are embracing. We are learning from the natural
wisdom of our Indigenous peoples. Even our fiction reflects how we value our environment and embrace diversity. “Diversity
fuels, not undermines, prosperity,” writes Forman.
As efforts are
made to reconcile the previous wrongs to Indigenous peoples within Canada and as
empowering stories about environment are created and shared, Canada carries on
the open and welcoming nature of our Indigenous peoples in encouraging
immigration. In 2016, the same year the American government announced a ban on
refugees, Canada took in 300,000 immigrants, which included 48,000 refuges.
Canada encourages citizenship and around 85% of permanent residents typically become
citizens. Greater Toronto is currently the most diverse city in the world; half
of its residents were born outside the country. Vancouver, Calgary, Ottawa and
Montreal are not far behind.
Canadian
author and visionary Marshal McLuhan wrote in 1963 that, “Canada is the only
country in the world that knows how to live without an identity.” This is an
incredible accomplishment, particularly given our own colonial history and the
current jingoistic influence of the behemoth south of us.
Writer and essayist
Ralston Saul suggests that Canada has taken to heart the Indigenous concept of ‘welcome’
to provide, “Space for multiple identities and multiple loyalties...[based on]
an idea of belonging which is comfortable with contradictions.” Of this Forman
writes:
“According to poet and
scholar BW Powe, McLuhan saw in Canada the raw materials for a dynamic new
conception of nationhood, one unshackled from the state’s ‘demarcated
borderlines and walls, its connection to blood and soil,’ its obsession with
‘cohesion based on a melting pot, on nativist fervor, the idea of the promised
land’. Instead, the weakness of the established Canadian identity encouraged a
plurality of them—not to mention a healthy flexibility and receptivity to
change. Once Canada moved away from privileging denizens of the former empire
to practicing multiculturalism, it could become a place where ‘many faiths and
histories and visions would co-exist.”
And that’s
exactly what is happening. We are not a “melting pot” stew of mashed up
cultures absorbed into a greater homogeneity of nationalism, no longer
recognizable for their unique qualities. Canada isn’t trying to “make Canada
great again.” Canada is a true multi-cultural nation that celebrates its
diversity: the wholes that make up the wholes.
Confident and comfortable with our ‘incomplete identity’—recognizing it for what it is—is according to Forman, “a positive, a spur to move forward without spilling blood, to keep thinking and evolving—perhaps, in the end, simply to respond to newness without fear.”
This resonates with me as
an ecologist. What I envision is a Canada transcending the political to embrace
the environment that both defines us and provides us with our very lives; a
view that knows no boundaries, and recognizes the importance of diversity,
relationship and inclusion, interaction, movement, and discovery.
So, am I still proud of
Canada? Definitely. We have much to be proud of. We live in one of the
wealthiest countries in the world and the 8th highest ranking in the
Human Development Index. Canada ranks among the highest in international
measurements of government transparency, civil liberties, quality of life,
economic freedom, and education. It stands among the world's most educated
countries—ranking first worldwide in the number of adults having tertiary
education with 51% of adults holding at least an undergraduate college or
university degree. With two official languages, Canada practices an open
cultural pluralism toward creating a cultural mosaic of racial, religious and
cultural practices. Canada’s symbols are influenced by natural, historical and
Aboriginal sources. Prominent symbols include the maple leaf, the beaver,
Canada Goose, Common Loon, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the polar bear,
the totem pole, and Inuksuk.
We are a northern country with a healthy awareness of our
environment—our weather, climate and natural world. This awareness—particularly of
climate change—is more and more being reflected in our literature—from
Margaret Atwood’s “Maddaddam” trilogy and
Kim Stanley Robinson’s “2140” to my own book “Water Is…” and upcoming “A Diary in the Age of
Water.” Canadians are writing more eco-fiction, climate fiction, and fiction in which
environment somehow plays a key role. Water has
become one of those key players: I recently was editor of the Reality Skimming
Press anthology “Water”, a collection of six speculative Canadian stories
that explore near-future scenarios with water as principle agent.
In a recent interview with Mary Woodbury on Eco-Fiction, I
reflected on a trend over the years that I noticed in the science fiction
writing course I teach at George Brown College: “It’s a workshop-style course I teach and students are
encouraged to bring in their current work in progress. More and more students
are bringing in a WIP with strong ecological overtones. I’d say the percentage
now is over 70%. This is definitely coming from the students—it’s before I even
open my mouth about ecology and eco-fiction—and what it suggests to me
is that the welfare of our planet and our ecosystems is on many people’s minds
and this is coming through in our most metaphoric writing: science fiction.”
It is healthy
to celebrate our accomplishments while remembering where we came from and what we
still need to accomplish. This provides direction and motivation.
References:
Dechene, Paul.
2015. “Sci-Fi Writers Discuss Climate
Catastrophe: Nina Munteanu, Author of Darwin’s Paradox.” Prairie Dog, December 11, 2015.
Forman,
Charles. 2017. “The Canada Experiment: Is this
the World’s First Postnational Country?” The Guardian,
January 4, 2017.
Gray,
Charlotte. 2017. “Heroes and Symbols” The
Globe and Mail.
Moorhouse,
Emilie. 2018. “New ‘cli-fi’ anthology brings
Canadian visions of future climate crisis.” National Observer, March 9, 2018.
Munteanu, Nina.
2016. “Crossing into the Ecotone to
Write Meaningful Eco-Fiction.” In: NinaMunteanu.me, December 18, 2016.
Woodbury,
Mary. 2016. “Part XV. Women Working in Nature
and the Arts: Interview with Nina Munteanu, Ecologist and Author.” Eco-Fiction.com, October 31,
2016.
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