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Los Angeles Times
February 15, 2004 Sunday
Home Edition
SECTION: BOOK REVIEW; Features Desk; Part R; Pg. 2
LENGTH: 979 words
HEADLINE: WESTWORDS;
Charting the landscape of the mind;
Surveying the Interior Literary Cartographers and the Sense of Place Rick Van
Noy University of Nevada Press: 220 pp., $44.95, $21.95 paper
BYLINE: Jonathan Kirsch, Jonathan Kirsch, a contributing writer to the
Book Review, is the author of "God Against the Gods: The History of the War
Between Monotheism and Polytheism."
BODY:
"No place, not even a wild place, is a place," wrote Wallace Stegner, "until it
has had that human attention that at its highest reach we call poetry."
Rick Van Noy, an English professor at Radford University, uses a different
vocabulary to describe the same phenomenon in "Surveying the Interior," a
cerebral but illuminating book that comfortably straddles literary criticism and
the Earth sciences.
He is intrigued by the work of what he calls "literary cartographers" -- that
is, "cartographers who wanted to write," as he puts it, and "writers who wanted
to map." His focus is on John Wesley Powell and Clarence King, whom he places in
the first category, and Henry David Thoreau and Stegner, who belong in the
second.
"The literary cartographers I write about have surveyed spaces that looked
inviting on official maps but came to sense the ways that the map ... failed to
communicate the places they traveled through," explains Van Noy. "Their maps
present a landscape, but their writing ... re-presents the place as it was
experienced."
Van Noy is describing a phenomenon that will be familiar to anyone who has
studied a AAA map in advance of a road trip and then experienced a moment of
epiphany when the lines on paper are transformed before one's eyes into a
landscape of shapes and textures, sounds and smells, emotions and memories: "The
feel of a place," as one geographer quoted by the author puts it, "registered in
one's muscles and bones."
Van Noy surveys the literary landscape through the lens of "ecocriticism," an
approach to literature that brings the background into the foreground, as the
author puts it. But he also draws on a toolbox of scholarship -- "geology,
geography, cartography, philosophy, psychology, anthropology, art and history"
-- to explain what he finds in the work of the writers on whom this volume
concentrates and a whole army of others with similar ambitions, including Barry
Lopez ("Arctic Dreams"), Edward Abbey ("Desert Solitaire") and William Least
Heat-Moon ("PrairyErth"), who explored the distinctions between what he calls
"paper land," which one finds on a map, and the "deep map" that one glimpses
only with one's eyes. "If we experience space as an idea," Van Noy explains, "we
experience places through sensory impressions -- the seen, heard, felt, smelled,
tasted."
Thoreau, for example, was a surveyor and cartographer by trade but found that
mapmaking only distanced him from the land under his feet: "I have lately been
surveying the Walden woods so extensively and minutely," he wrote in his journal
in 1858, "that I now see it mapped in my mind's eye ... as so many men's
wood-lots." That is why Thoreau came to see the act of wandering in the woods as
a spiritual discipline: "Not till we are lost ... ," he wrote, "do we begin to
find ourselves and realize where we are and the infinite extent of our
relations."
Even a scientist like King came to something of the same conclusion. A field
geologist whose maps were essential to the exploration and settlement of the
West -- King was the first director of the U.S. Geological Survey and mapped the
route of the Transcontinental Railroad -- he realized that something subtle and
precious is lost when a place is fixed by metes and bounds.
"King's discoveries aren't always of geological or scientific significance,"
writes Van Noy of King's memoir, "Mountaineering in the Sierra Nevada," (1872)
"he also discovers that every ascent and mapped place diminishes the quantity of
available mysteries."
King's successor at the USGS, John Wesley Powell, has come to be regarded as a
near-mythic figure -- he is best remembered as the one-armed Civil War veteran
who ran the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon. But Powell was also "the
quintessential mapmaker," as Van Noy points out, and "ever the conscientious
scientist." By a certain irony, however, Powell's colorful account of his
fieldwork, "The Exploration of the Colorado River of the West and Its
Tributaries" (1875), only reinforced the larger-than-life imagery in which the
memory of the man is now fixed.
"While he aimed to correct some existing myths about the Colorado River country,
Powell was also helping to perpetuate and construct myths about ... the American
West," writes Van Noy. "The fact that he was exploring the last blank spot on
the map facilitated the hero motif that would long be associated with the
western frontier."
Stegner, who in his biography of Powell looked beyond the myth, is the most
readable and the most often read of the authors whose work is contemplated in
"Surveying the Interior." Perhaps no other writer of the 20th century achieved
the same depth of emotion and grandeur of vision that he brought to his fiction
and nonfiction about the West. Stegner "learn[ed] from the surveyor's life story
what Powell learned too late," writes Van Noy. "Narratives about place 'map'
landscape better than maps can."
Stegner endears himself to Van Noy when he muses on the surveyor as a forgotten
hero of the West in "Wolf Willow": "The mythic light in which we have bathed our
frontier times ... does not shine on the surveyor as it does on the trapper,
trader, scout, cowboy, or Indian fighter." He admires how Stegner links intimate
human experience with a vivid sense of place, as when the narrator in "Angle of
Repose" explains: "I want to touch once more the ground I have been maimed away
from."
"This is a contact that Thoreau knew," writes Van Noy, "but Stegner adds to the
sensory experience a thick layer of memory, history, association, and
affection."
Van Noy is clearly addressing his fellow scholars in "Surveying the Interior,"
but he also has something to say to the general reader. Indeed, Van Noy's book
should inspire many to take a second look at "Beyond the Hundredth Meridian,"
Stegner's magisterial biography of Powell, and to look at it in a wholly new
light. *
GRAPHIC: PHOTO: TOPOGRAPHY: An illustrator's view of the Grand Canyon
looking east from the Grand Wash. PHOTOGRAPHER: University of Nevada Press
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