Ecocriticism through Big Yellow Taxi
Big Yellow Taxi is a song written by Joni Mitchell, performed
here by Counting Crows, about not appreciating what you have when you have it,
only acknowledging its importance once it leaves. The environment is something
we all take for granted. People often do their best when it comes to
sustainable living, but it gets difficult when everyone (namely large
corporations that contribute the most to climate change) doesn’t give it their
all. Those in power aren’t going to realize what we’ve lost until it’s too late
to do anything.
A big element in ecocriticism that is discussed in “Literary
Theory” by Mary Kelges is the term anthropocentrism. That’s a big word
for Elmo. The first half of the word ‘anthro’ meaning humans, and the second
half, ‘centrism’ meaning center. Anthropocentrism is all about how humans see
themselves at the center of the world, that nature is there to serve them and
that’s it. It is a belief held by a lot of people high up in government, those
who wish to drill, drill, drill, for more oil to make their lives better,
either not realizing or not caring about how it affects the environment.
The first line of the song jumps right to the point, “They paved paradise and put up a parking lot”. We had this beautiful, natural paradise and they paved it, put up a parking lot for the new hotel and boutique; things that humans see as more important than nature itself. It’s not something we need, it’s just for our pleasure. We take nature for granted, and we won’t know what the impact is until it is all gone and there is nothing for us to do to get it back.
In “The Shoulders We Stand on: An Introduction to Ethnicity and
Ecocriticism”, authors Joni Anderson and Scott Slovic discuss the first and
second wave of ecocriticism described by Lawrence Buell. This song emulates the
first wave where we appreciate nature and try to keep humans separate, mitigating
the harm they inflict.
“I don't wanna give it, why you wanna give it?Why you wanna give it all away? Hey, hey, heyNow you wanna give it, ah, she wanna give it'Cause she's giving it all away,”
The use of “she” in this is alluding to mother nature; she
wants to give us what she has and we are giving it up, we are crumpling the gift
she’s given us and throwing it right in the trash.
“Hey, farmer, farmer, put away your DDTI don't care about spots on my applesLeave me the birds and the beesPlease!”
DDT is a pesticide that farmers used to put on their crops that severely harm other parts of the environment. Often, they are not needed—spots on apples won’t kill you, they’re just kinda ugly to see. DDT was widely used but has been banned because of the effect it had on animals higher up in the food chain. It builds up in fatty tissue and has been seen to cause reproductive issues and cause cancer in humans. The singer is pleading; keep the wildlife safe, we’ll take the ugly apples!


I like how you emphasize first-wave ecocriticism. I see how the song holds up nature as wild and needing our protection. While ecocriticism in its second and third wave forms expands to include communities in need of environmental justice, as well as spaced we have abandoned, it is helpful to return to the first wave position of how we "give away" what has been given to us. The video, while somewhat disconnected from the lyrics, contains hints of environmental justice by focusing on urban areas and "third nature."
ReplyDeleteReally interesting and smart post! Your literary analysis really gets at what the song is doing. Thanks for sharing this.
I like that you pointed out that these chemicals put on fruit and other food are no good for the environment or for us because like you said having spots on an apple is ugly but it doesn’t hurt. It plays into the idea that humans need things to be normal or not look weird in order to feel okay about either eating it or being around something. If anything doesn’t fit into the norm then it’s labeled as bad or weird. It’s just an apple, why does it need to be pretty.
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