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Bowers, C. A. (1997). The Culture of Denial: Why the Environmental Movement Needs a Strategy for Reforming Universities and Public Schools. Reviewed by David A. Gruenewald

 


Bowers, C. A. (1997). The Culture of Denial: Why the Environmental Movement Needs a Strategy for Reforming Universities and Public Schools. Albany: State University of New York Press.

277 pages         ISBN # 0791434648

$17.95

Reviewed by David A. Gruenewald
The University of New Mexico

August 21, 1998


          In his keynote address to the 1997 Environmental Education Association of New Mexico, writer John Nichols recently said it out loud to a crowd of green-leaning educators:
"The dilemma that an educator must face is that by and large our schools try to teach everyone to accept the economic system and to succeed within it. Unfortunately, that success pretty much guarantees the accelerated blighting of the planet and all living things, without exception."
         In numerous and wide-ranging writings, C. A. Bowers has for years been building an argument that supports Nichols' provocative statement about education. His is a scholarly and culturally deep environmentalism that includes critiques of technocratic and emancipatory liberalism, critical theory, and postmodernism alike. Bowers' main complaint of the various realms of educational theory and practice is that they all virtually ignore what Nichols, he, and many others cannot: that the taken-for- granted ways we learn to think and live have, especially during the last fifty years, created a mounting ecological crisis. The Culture of Denial is the third of Bowers' books in the 1990s (Education, Cultural Myths, and the Ecological Crisis, 1993; Educating for an Ecologically Sustainable Culture, 1995) to address the connection between our conception and practice of education and our relationship as human cultures to life-sustaining ecological systems. Most fundamentally, Bowers is asking all educators to consider two questions: "Which cultural patterns are contributing to the ecological crisis? and What are the characteristics of cultural patterns that contribute to long-term sustainability" (p.27)?
         Careful to analyze the roles thought and language play in the cultural landscape, Bowers points out the unnatural linguistic dualism in our tendency to think and talk about culture as separate from environment. Separating "human culture" from "ecological systems" is an anthropocentric mistake that is ecologically impossible. This cognitive and cultural separation of "environment" from the human enterprise, according to Bowers and a host of ecological thinkers, pretty much guarantees all sorts of destruction. Universities and schools reinforce this split mostly by ignoring environment. When they do acknowledge its significance, it is often with an add on approach: courses or units in environmental studies remain safely apart from the rest of the curriculum. Bowers argues that the environmental movement itself contributes to the problem by focusing the public's attention on specific environmental problems rather than the cultural origins of the ecological crisis. Bowers acknowledges the successes and strength of the environmental movement and with this book asks environmentalists to "shift their focus from incidental interest in educational issues to a more sustained discussion (p.21)."
         One of the most provocative constructs Bowers uses to critique those in denial of our human/ecological relationship and resulting crisis (that is the vast majority of educators at all levels) is the term "pre-ecological." This designation, seeming to disparage and goad underdeveloped thinkers, suggests that a poorly formed ecological consciousness is something that education can and should remedy. Perhaps the best way to see if institutions of education have begun to develop ecologically is to determine whether or not they acknowledge, in their structure, pedagogy and curriculum, David Orr's (1992) potent statement that "all education is environmental education" (p.90). Although Bowers gives some good examples of educational groups and programs that try to take Orr's statement seriously (e.g., The Secretariat of University Presidents for a Sustainable Future housed at Tufts University, The Green University Strategic Plan for George Washington University, Portland State University's School of Education graduate program, etc.), he is concerned that ecological perspectives remain outside the rigid boundaries of most disciplines. In other words, disciplines such as psychology, political science, philosophy, history, economics, sociology, education, and even some physical sciences remain pre- ecological. These disciplines, Bowers contends, continue to distort and ignore the human culture/ecological systems relationship.
         Numerous times in this and previous books, perhaps hoping to reach the reader through sheer repetition, Bowers lists what he calls the root metaphors of modernism that most institutions of education take for granted. These root metaphors or assumptions lead, to twist Orr's statement, to a kind of anti-environmental education. The three most central of these metaphors are 1) a view of the individual as the basic social unit, 2) an anthropocentric view of the world, and 3) a view of change as inherently progressive. Bowers demonstrates that all modern and postmodern theories of education take these assumptions for granted (though there is some discussion at least at the theoretical level about number one). The legitimacy of individualism, science, technology, and "progress" rules supreme-- all the while overseeing the exploitation of people worldwide and the demise of life-sustaining natural systems. These assumptions, Bowers argues, are deeply embedded in our cultural and thus educational patterns. Bowers calls for all educators to reflect on these assumptions in the context of what he calls the "diverging trendlines" of rapidly increasing human population and resource demand and the rapidly decreasing sustaining capacities of ecosystems. Bowers wants educators to consider that schools as currently conceived are a part of the ecological problem. As Nichols contends, we keep teaching for "success" in an ecological system that can't tolerate much more of it.
         One of many instructive illustrations of this fact is the connection Bowers makes between schools of business and colleges of education. Graduates of schools of business are taught to lead the way in capitalistic, global economic expansion. Graduates of colleges of education (at all levels) "socialize the broader population of youth to the taken-for-granted patterns of thinking that equate progress with the continual expansion of technology into more areas of cultural life, and with continued economic and consumer 'opportunities'" (p.78). In other words, both colleges of education and schools of business fully embrace what ecological economist Herman E. Daly (1991) terms growthmania. They each help promote the current cultural love affair with the "global market," a phrase with an especially foreboding anthropocentric and exploitative ring. As a result, we have schools designed around individual competition for grades, status, jobs and ultimately commodities produced and marketed by an ever improving and expanding technological society. As Bowers observes, the business community's growing ability to influence public school and university agendas assures that they will produce consumers and producers socialized to embrace the ideology of capitalism and economic growth.
         As an antidote to "the doctrine of economic colonization that treats both the worlds cultures and ecosystems [and children and students] as an increasingly integrated market system" (p.80), Bowers first wants to make ecologically destructive cultural patterns explicit for educators. He then wants to name, reflect on and revive alternative cultural patterns that would replace growthmania with sustainability. Such practices would be based on models of cultural development that have been and remain present in ecologically centered cultures. These models are essentially the opposite of modernism's root ideas cited above. A few of these include: 1) meta-narratives that represent human beings as interdependent with all life, 2) a view of progress that conserves the authority of past tradition, and 3) "forms of community where? patterns of civic responsibility and reciprocity ensure that economic production and exchange do not become the dominant force in everyday life" (p.5). Bowers calls the guiding ideology needed to learn and teach sustainability "cultural/bio-conservatism; that is, an ideological orientation that emphasizes conserving cultural values, beliefs, and practices that contribute to sustainable relationships with the environment" (p.5).
         And here we discover what Bowers is fond of calling our double bind. Not only do universities and public schools marginalize the above ecologically sustainable concepts as primitive or belonging to political groups such as environmentalists, but they also indoctrinate their students (and faculty) in modernist concepts that exacerbate our already strained relationship with the natural world. Bowers points to an important distinction embedded in institutions of education between high status and low status knowledge. High status knowledge is that which leads to more technological development, more economic growth, and the further commodification of the human experience; low status knowledge describes the conservation of ecologically sustainable cultural patterns. Like Greg Cajete (1994), Bowers advocates a sort of cultural revivalism that would uncover and venerate traditions of ecologically centered cultures such as respect for elders, connectedness to the land, and a sense of community responsibility. Instead of showing up in a low-status folklore course, Bowers suggests that these aspects of cultural/bio-conservatism should guide all aspects of education.
         Bowers is extremely thorough in his deconstruction and reconstruction of the ideological foundations of education. Sometimes he may even go a little too far into the shelves of philosophy to make his point. The Culture of Denial, for example, resurrects Nietzsche's notion of ressentiment, a word used "to describe the pathological form of 'will to power' expressed in the need to maintain a fixed (and safe) worldview" (p.162). The psychological theory is apropos, if somewhat hard to follow, but seems more about Bowers' interest in Nietzsche than reinterpreting culture and identity ecologically. Bowers' philosophical background is always impressive, but I wonder if the scope and depth of his scholarship might be a barrier to the educators and environmentalists he is trying to reach. His previous readers will notice that many of his past concerns, such as his detailed critique of liberalism and his argument against computers, reappear in this latest work. This, I believe, is a wise strategy. Bowers' critique of the foundations of education and the direction of contemporary culture is so sweeping, it is worth considering until educators begin to consider how their practices, and the metaphors that guide them, always have ecological consequences. Bowers refuses to allow sustainability to become just another value position to consider, as Richard Rorty might, with detached irony. Ecological sustainability is the table at which all other conversations remain possible. Because people are generally not impressed with the notion of an ecological crisis (unless it erupts in their own backyards), the problem of educating for ecological sustainability represents a huge challenge to ecologically literate educators. Pre-ecological university and public school education continue to reinforce ideological orientations that allow the growth-obsessed market to convince us that all is well, buy more stuff. Many of us really are in denial that our cultural patterns not only are unsustainable but are destructive of other cultures and ecosystems. Plenty of media images--perhaps our era's most successful educators--constantly tell us not to worry about it. Even serious news outlets--National Public Radio, for example--religiously report on the status of our economy as measured by the Dow the GDP or the rate of economic growth. Never do they make the connection that growthmania in the global market has serious consequences for peoples and ecosystems worldwide. The author wants educators to make and teach such connections.
         Bowers' critique of the modernist assumptions behind educational practice is powerful. It is careful analysis and corroboration of Nichol's claim that our economic success is blighting the planet. Bowers' strategies to begin moving educational institutions in the direction of ecological literacy and cultural change are less convincing. One interesting scenario asks for an "environmentally oriented foundation" to hold retreats for "top administrators down to the level of deans of major units of the university" (p.228). These top-heavy retreats would feature well-known scientists demonstrating how the growth in human population and resource demand is impacting the Earth's ecosystems. Such retreats, Bowers hopes, would challenge university officials to rethink their roles in reproducing the modernist version of progress and high status knowledge. This seems important, if unlikely, given that universities continue to bow to the pressures of the market and do not seem interested in questioning growthmania and their role in contributing to it. In a slightly more realistic vein, Bowers urges environmentalists to "set as their goal that over the next five to ten years all education courses will address some aspect of how formal education can contribute to a more ecologically sustainable future" (p.258). Those of us familiar with colleges of education know how difficult it is to pursue any kind of fundamental change. Colleges of education train teachers to fill existing roles without paying much attention to the roles teachers and school organizations play in mediating cultural knowledge and experience. Bowers is not the first theorist to call for educators to be more aware of how culture is embedded in our practice. Perhaps that is why this book explicitly calls on the environmental movement: if environmental organizations directed their considerable resources to the right leverage points, maybe they could make some things happen. In any case, replacing the root metaphors of modernism with sustainable root metaphors is a provocative theory. Following Bowers arguments could lead the reader to some clarification, even transformation, about the nature of his/her relationships with the world. But the theory begs for examples describing the problems of implementation at the institutional level: it lacks a theory for creating change.
         Like Orr (1992), Bowers believes change in education is the only way out of the growing ecological crisis. Although growthmania and its ecological consequences are chief concerns for Bowers, he does not attempt to critique how the structures of capitalism permeate all aspects of modern life on an increasingly global scale. This lack might be viewed as a weakness to those readers concerned that education is in many ways controlled by political structures outside of education. One might ask: is it possible to change education without simultaneously changing the structures that control it? Bowers does not grapple with this question. His critique and his vision for change focus more on cultural beliefs than institutional practices.
         Bowers is aware that the kind of ideological change he is promoting will not come easily. He repeatedly points to recent success in overcoming some elements of sexism and racism as examples that our modern biases can change as long as there are groups capable and willing to keep the pressure on. Depending on one's perspective regarding the success of movements opposing sexism and racism, one may or may not feel that this is reason for hopefulness. With his latest book, Bowers condenses and extends many of his previous arguments and asks the environmental movement to help generate and sustain the larger cultural conversation that might help steer educational institutions away from the destructive patterns of modernism and toward ecological sustainability. Until that conversation is embraced by universities and public schools, they will no doubt remain pre- ecological and largely ignorant of the consequences.

References

Bowers, C.A. (1993). Education, cultural myths, and the ecological crisis: Toward deep changes. Albany: State University of New York Press.

Bowers, C.A. (1995). Educating for an ecologically sustainable culture: Rethinking moral education creativity, intelligence, and other modern orthodoxies. Albany: State University of New York Press.

Cajete, G. (1994). Look to the mountain: An ecology of indigenous education. Durango: Kivaki Press.

Daly, H. E. (1992). Steady-state economics. Washington, D.C.: Island Press.

Orr, D. (1992). Ecological literacy: Education and the transition to a postmodern world. Albany: State University of New York Press.

About the Reviewer

David A. Gruenewald
The University of New Mexico

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