Claire Adler came to Synchronicity Earth with a lifelong interest in conservation, a lot of anxiety about climate change—and a degree in medieval English literature.
In the following blog, she writes about how studying our past, from peat bogs to the origins of colonialism, taught her the skills and perspectives she needed to start her career in conservation.
When I explain my background to my coworkers, I tend to emphasise that my research approached medieval literature from an environmental perspective. I’m interested in the new stories old texts can tell us about humanity’s place in the natural world.
But in reality, I didn’t spend much of my degree focused on the environment: I was too busy learning how to decode medieval handwriting, gaining a grounding in the history of the period, and spending lots and lots of time reading very weird poems very, very carefully.
These pursuits, for me, are fascinating, enriching, and endlessly exciting—but I did occasionally wonder how I could justify spending time on them, while earth is in the midst of the greatest catastrophe in human history. Perhaps not the best time for poring over fifteenth century manuscripts.
A background in the humanities
A few months ago, my manager shared her rationale for hiring me. I was cheered, and somewhat surprised, to learn that most of these reasons can be traced to the skills I developed as a literature student. In my “ability for critical thinking in communications (e.g., is this source problematic?)” I recognised countless hours spent weighing up various articles on medieval maps. In my “strong passion for editing,” I saw the ghost of essays saved from disaster by the judicious application of the red pen. Even my “good understanding of the type of working patterns which work for [me]” derived from learning to organise my own time while writing my master’s dissertation.
Since coming on at Synchronicity Earth, those skills have made me feel like a valuable member of the team, despite having far less conservation expertise than most of my coworkers.
Of course, writing experience comes in handy for blog posts and social media captions, but it also makes it easier to effectively structure a presentation, to consider the ethical implications of the language we use, and to envision ways of talking about the biodiversity crisis that inspire action, rather than despair.
For me, environmental despair arrives hand-in-hand with a feeling of resentment and injustice—it seems desperately unfair to have been born into the worst crisis in human history. Beyond the practical skills it has afforded me, I am grateful for my humanities background because it enables me to place today’s crisis in historical context. Recognising the long European legacy of violence against the living world reframes the present moment as an opportunity to finally create a radically new society.
Peat and oil: repeating history
In The Edge of the World, the historian Michael Pye traces the origins of the modern, money-based economy to the shores of the “low countries”. There, traders began accumulating wealth by trading commodities for currency, rather than land. At the same time, they started destroying the land they were on—the industry that powered this new trade economy was powered by burning peat.
Peat is plant matter that accumulates in bogs, where the lack of oxygen prevents it from fully decomposing. Forming layers up to five meters thick, it can be mined, dried, and then burned like a less-powerful coal. Although technically renewable, peat is very slow growing. A layer three metres thick takes around 3,000 years to form.
Large-scale peat mining took off in Flanders (in the north of modern-day Belgium) in the 1100s. From there, it spread across the region, moving from one urban centre to another as local supplies were depleted. By the end of the fifteenth century, all easily-accessible reserves were gone.
In response to this early energy crisis, peat-reliant industry did not transition to alternate forms of fuel. Instead, much like today’s fossil fuel industry, it pivoted to increasingly environmentally costly forms of extraction. Novel technology made it possible to gather peat found below sea level. These stores came at a price—without the bogs working as natural dykes, sea water came rushing in. Soon, between 115 and 230 hectares of land was surrendered to the ocean every year. Ultimately, peat mining below sea level flooded a staggering ten per cent of Holland and Utrecht.
Unsustainable energy consumption provoking environmental crisis (complete with rising sea levels!) is, of course, uncomfortably familiar. But the phenomenon is not just an uncanny parallel of today’s climate crisis. It is part of the same story.
Those peat-burning industrialists released unprecedented quantities of carbon into the atmosphere. Although negligible in today’s turns, it’s now busy warming the planet, along with all the fuel we’ve burned since.
The consequences of colonialism
More importantly, we still live in their world. The drivers of colonialism were complicated, but unsustainable European economies depleting their local resources was almost certainly one of them. Indeed, while the Dutch depleted their peat, England was in the midst of widespread panic about timber shortages—panic soothed by tales of vast forests in the so-called ‘New World’. England, like Belgium, the Netherlands, and many other European states, went on to found a brutal colonial empire, rooted in the idea that land exists to be exploited, and that anything, and anyone, can be ‘extracted’, bought, and sold.
Today’s economy still operates according to this same paradigm. The wealth of the Global North can be traced directly to colonialism and slavery, and avenues