June 13th, 2007 by The Bosphorus
I thought I’d post a link about religion and teens and the state of the union. It’s a pretty interesting article reviewing a book about how teens reflect our society contrary to popular opinion. The book talks about other things, too.
Smith and Denton’s most significant contribution to our understanding of American teenagers’ religious and spiritual lives begins when the authors attempt to explain why teens believe what they believe — in a sense, why they are so conventional.
The book brings up this idea of “theraputic individualism”, which is what really grabbed my attention.
“Therapeutic individualism’s ethos perfectly serves the needs and interests of U.S. mass-consumer capitalist economy by constituting people as self-fulfillment-oriented consumers subject to advertising’s influence on their subjective feelings.” And to be good, happy capitalists, we should be good, unless if being good prevents us from being happy.
However, I’ve decided what’s more important is this book of poems by Mary Oliver that I’ve been reading. Here is a poem by Oliver from that same book.
The Snowshoe Hare
The fox
is so quiet–
he moves like a red rain–
even when his
shoulders tense and then
snuggle down for an instant
against the ground
and the perfect
gate of his teeth
slams shut
there is nothing
you can hear
but the cold creek moving
over the dark pebbles
and across the field
and into the rest of the world–
and even when you find
in the morning
the feathery
scuffs of fur
of the vanished
snowshoe hare
tangled
on the pale spires
of the broken flowers
of the lost summer–
fluttering a little
but only
like the lapping threads
of the wind itself–
there is still
nothing that you can hear
but the cold creek moving
over the old pebbles
and across the field and into
another year.
June 13th, 2007 at 10:39 pm
That’s a beautiful poem.
You and AT are doing some kind of high-brow, low-brow experiment on us, aren’t you?
June 14th, 2007 at 12:25 am
Ditto on the poem.
Not so sure about the roots of the article, however there appear to be some interesting ideas lurking in there.
June 14th, 2007 at 7:15 am
Mary Oliver has some amazing poems. She has this very keen eye for watching nature that I really like.
I haven’t read the book the article reviewed. It’s been 2 years since both were published. I’d be interested to find out how the books argument has stood up during that time.
June 14th, 2007 at 10:46 am
In a society where the future of our teens is so vulnerable due to the war they need to cling to something. During the cold war many teenagers clung to religion. I am not saying it is right or wrong but it is a survival technique. If this great number of teens truly believed we would have fewer drug problems or alcohol problems among teens.
June 14th, 2007 at 4:55 pm
This also makes me think of how neatly prosperity theology fits into our growing consumerism.
June 14th, 2007 at 7:57 pm
You know I hadn’t realized how the poem and the article speak to each other.
The poem presents a very stark, but not pessimistic, realism. The article points to a spirituality that works to avoid that very same realism, namely death.
The big difference between the two is that death is the very end of the spirituality of comfort and pleasure fulfillment. Death gives way to life and more life in Oliver’s poem and especially her other poems.