by StevenSlaughter » Fri 22 Aug 2008, 09:50:27
Among my gloomy summer reading on PO, I just finished a book not specifically about PO, but one that clearly has some things to say about a best possible future. It is Eric Brende's "Better Off: Flipping the Switch on Technology." Brende was a grad student consciously critiquing the effects of technology in our lives (amusingly, he was doing this at MIT). He isn't a strict Luddite, but thinks through what hardly anybody considers anymore -- what do I give up along with whatever I gain from each technology I use? To examine his ideas, he and his wife move to a small farming village.
I'm not quite sure where it is (he is careful to preserve their privacy). It is not strictly Amish, though to the eyes of most of us, it would appear so. As he described it, some folks had been Old Order Amish, while others were Mennonite, while a few were non-religious but gravitated to this lifestyle. Like the Amish, there is a religious and cultural connection between most of the long-term residents, but they also welcome others to work along side them and become neighbors.
Anyway, as I read the book, it struck me that this is the sort of village that could survive long-term pretty much independently better than almost any model I can imagine. Brende really emphasizes the community aspect of life as the heart of its satisfactions. In his own modest first-season farming attempts, he was given huge amounts of help, even as he provided help to others. This was not only technically vital but, Brende says, emotionally and socially satisfying in a way that struggling as a solo homesteader would not have been.
As such, I wonder if such communities are forming and thought that some of you might be either doing this already or be thinking about it as part of your plans. Building such places from scratch is very difficult, which is why most of the hippie communes are long gone. And I'm not talking about communes anyway, but more like Amish farming communities with a strong culture of common aid and concern for neighbors. Can something like this thrive without a certain cultural rigidity, such a common religious identity?
In my imagination, I see a very satisfying kind of life that contains many of the benefits of Amish living, but with more flexibility and variation in culture, religion, etc. While I enjoy spending time with fellow Christians, I don't want to cloister myself off with only others just like me.
Anyway, just wanted to launch a discussion along these lines.
Thoughts?
Steven Slaughter
Chicago