In his now classic essay “The Climate of History: Four Theses” (2009), Dipesh Chakrabarty reflects on the challenges that the crisis of climate change poses to “our capacity for historical understanding.”Footnote 1 Chakrabarty sketches the genealogy of the distinction between natural history and human history: he traces such division to Giambattista Vico's eighteenth-century arguments about the limits of human reason and to “the old Viconian-Hobbesian idea that we, humans, could have proper knowledge of only civil and political institutions because we made them, while nature remains God's work and ultimately inscrutable to man.”Footnote 2 As Chakrabarty and other scholars have pointed out, the sense of culture as unfolding in a different register from nature has remained, until recent decades, at the core of the scholarly understanding in the human sciences—a framework of thinking that anthropogenic climate change has exposed as deeply flawed. “Anthropogenic explanations of climate change spell the collapse of the age-old humanist distinction between natural history and human history,” resumes Chakrabarty.Footnote 3
Anthropogenic climate change obliges the academy to rethink “humanness” and to activate in its classrooms a deeper understanding of the fundamental, thoroughgoing intertwining of human ideas, lives, and actions with natural environments. How are scholars to undertake such a change in the study of history, such as research into Soviet-era lives and experiences? I propose that in studies of Soviet subjectivities, such a framing discloses the need to rethink subjecthood from the perspective of the naturecultural continuum.Footnote 4
Soviet studies has typically viewed the concept of the self or the subject from the perspective of the subject's relationship to state-oriented ideological currents, following a tradition grounded in René Descartes and, more recently, Michel Foucault.Footnote 5 Such studies have contributed substantially to our understanding of the Soviet era, but they have been unable to give due weight to the human ability to situate and define one's sense of self in and across several scales, to identify with personal, homely, communal, ethnic, national, global, planetary, and even cosmic perspectives—and to the role played in these processes by one's bodily interactions with material surroundings.Footnote 6
The aim of this article is to supplement existing studies of Soviet subjecthoods with a multiscalar perspective attuned to naturecultural aspects in subject formation. The factors that condition era-specific models of subjecthood include state-ideology and shared cultural value-systems, but they also include concrete, bodily interactions with a primary environment—the place one has settled, the daily objects one encounters. Bodily sensoria shape the scale of intimacy in self-identification, a primary level upon which other scales of identification can be built—regional, national, global, planetary, and even cosmic.Footnote 7 In thinking about Soviet-era subjecthoods, the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries focus on state ideology, the theme of “how one-sixth of the globe was gobbled up by words,” might profitably be supplemented to include multiscalar considerations of the ways that words, feelings, things, environments, and bodies intermingle, and the ways in which the bodily, enfleshed human subject takes shape through encounters with all kinds of matter, living and nonliving.Footnote 8 “File-selves,” defined primarily through the subject's relation to state ideologies, should make space for multilayered, fluid, bodily selves that are in active, constitutive interaction with everything that presents itself to sense and thought.Footnote 9
The essay proceeds as a genealogical excursion into understandings of Soviet subjecthood, moving from the state-ideological framework to a multiscalar naturecultural framework. I first highlight the role of Foucauldian thinking on analyses of Soviet subjectivities and review some post-Foucauldian critical options for understanding subjecthood. Relying on Estonian and Latvian late Soviet-era critical thinkers, I then introduce a multiscalar naturecultural understanding of Soviet-era subjecthoods. I turn to environmentally attuned considerations by two important authors of the late Soviet years—the Latvian novelist Alberts Bels and the Estonian poet and essayist Jaan Kaplinski. Bels's and Kaplinski's critical voices contributed powerfully to their own era, but this essay will show that their work has untapped potential to advance our critical understanding of subjecthood in the twenty-first century. The focus on Estonian and Latvian authors works to extend the scope of research on Soviet subjectivities from Russian subjectivities towards an approach that is inclusive of other nationalities of the USSR, thus contributing to the “decolonizing turn” with its aim of decreasing Russo-centrism in Soviet studies.Footnote 10
The particular model of subjecthood presented by Bels and Kaplinski involves a self that is a social subject, but that also deeply identifies with its surrounding ecosystem of living and nonliving matter. In their writings, a naturecultural model of subjecthood conveys an ethical sense of belonging and responsibility, together with the deep concern for growing ecological imbalances and rising levels of pollution. Other intellectuals, of course, voiced ideas similar to Bels and Kaplinski: this essay situates Bels's and Kaplinski's elaborations in the context of environmental thought in the 1960s–1980s, with special attention to the impact of Albert Schweitzer's conceptual framework. Thus, this article also testifies to continuities of thought across different ideological regimes.
In this project, I use “subject” and “self” synonymously as terms that include Butlerian “socially instituted and maintained norms of intelligibility,” but also involve the affective experience of encountering the world.Footnote 11 Subjecthood is thus here understood as constantly shaped by a broad range of external engagements.Footnote 12 In Soviet studies, distinctions are sometimes made between the self and the subject; in such an approach, subjecthood tends to be taken as an ideological construct.Footnote 13 My own position is that since ideological and affective-perceptual factors are thoroughly intertwined in subject-formation, efforts to separate these under different registers would not provide additional clarity for analysis.
The Foucauldian Subject in Soviet Studies
Cartesian and Foucauldian underpinnings are common in thinking about Soviet subjecthood. Michel Foucault's explorations of the role of power, knowledge and language in the formation of the subject dovetail very comfortably with the widespread foregrounding, in Soviet studies, of the individual's relationship with Soviet ideology, or, as a Foucauldian might put it, the individual's relationship to discursive manifestations of state power.
A Foucauldian view of the subject places an emphasis on subjects who function within constitutive networks of power-relations. The model of the panopticon, where people are situated in a clearly structured space, easily observable under the eyes of authorities, contains for many of his readers the quintessential model of power-structures: the question here is not about the “external” imposition of control per se, but rather about the subject's awareness of the gaze of authority and responsiveness to the possibility of being submitted to judgment.Footnote 14
Surveillance in a modern state, for Foucault, is not strictly about an external gaze, but concerns the innermost structures of subjectivity. For Foucault, this formative vision of power—formative in the sense that it forms subjects in a given time and place—originates in Christian institutions and the aim of individual salvation: the Christian version of power “cannot be exercised without knowing the inside of people's minds, without exploring their souls, without making them reveal their innermost secrets.”Footnote 15 Such a mode of power has been taken over by the modern state as “a modern matrix of individualization.”Footnote 16 In this model, truth, power, surveillance, knowledge, and language are tied together in ways that make it deeply challenging to contest the established power structure from anything like an exterior vantage point.
There is no doubt that Foucault's work offers profound insight into the functioning of modern societies, yet, as was typical of many thinkers of his generation, his focus and interests are bound to logocentric and anthropocentric aspects of human existence. Given the deep influence of Foucault's thinking within the humanities and its emphasis on discursive elements of power, it comes as no surprise that mainstream Soviet studies have acquired a strongly Foucauldian flavor. Take, for example, Jochen Hellbeck's well known articulation of the relationship between the individual and communist ideology: “The individual operates like a clearing house where ideology is un-packed and personalized, and in the process the individual remakes himself into a subject with distinct and meaningful biographical features.”Footnote 17
From Foucault toward a Naturecultural Continuum
The after-Foucauldian and post-poststructuralist years of scholarship in the critical humanities have significantly extended the horizons of thought about subjecthoods in philosophy, cultural studies, and other fields within the humanities. Substance, stuff, flesh, matter, immanence—the vulnerable, precarious body, instead of abstract ideas, has been foregrounded, but without leaving behind questions of power, language, and ideology. “A piece of meat activated by electric waves of desire,” is how Rosi Braidotti describes the embodied subject,
a text written by the unfolding of genetic encoding. . . . it is a folding in of external influences and a simultaneous unfolding outwards of affects. A mobile entity, an enfleshed type of memory that repeats and is capable of lasting through sets of discontinuous variations, while remaining faithful to itself.Footnote 18
The affective turn has actualized categories of moods, attunements, affects, and feelings as substantial parts in shaping and expressing human subjectivity.Footnote 19 New materialism has encouraged us to “think the deep, dense materiality of bodies-in-time”; ecocriticism and environmental studies have brought into focus the entangled unity of all living beings and their surrounding natural environments.Footnote 20 Bruno Latour has articulated how networks are “simultaneously real, like nature, narrated, like discourse, and collective, like society.”Footnote 21 Staci Alaimo has rearticulated human corporeality “as trans-corporeality, in which the human is always intermeshed with the more-than-human world.”Footnote 22 Environmental humanities, econtology, critical posthumanism, transhumanism and similar fields of study have added complexities of their own to the critical humanities.Footnote 23
In Soviet studies, recent work with an environmental focus—for example, work by Batsheba Demuth and Pey-Yi Chu—has not only drawn attention to human subjects as affected by forces of nature and by “the ways energy moved over the land and through the sea,” it has also invited us to approach human relationships with natural environments “not in terms of conquest or degradation but rather co-evolution.”Footnote 24 Andy Bruno's recent research on environmental subjectivities of the Soviet far north has most explicitly made an effort to “insert spatial and material interactions into a field [study of the Soviet past] that has sometimes overprivileged the impact of discourses”—an aim that the present study shares.Footnote 25 These excellent works often focus on the remote or exceptional or catastrophic: Kate Brown's work on plutonium disasters, Bathseba Demuth's on the Bering Strait, Andy Bruno's on the Kola peninsula and the Tunguska event, Pey-Yi Chu's on permafrost are outstanding examples.Footnote 26 Mieka Erley's recent monograph, On Russian Soil: Myth and Materiality (2021), draws attention to the nature-culture continuum at the heart of Russian culture, with its attention to “soil as a crucial site for modernization and its fantasies.”Footnote 27 Erley highlights the central role of soil in Russian culture and nation-building by focusing “on modern myths, discourses, and metaphors related to soil” and on “the resistances of soil as matter.”Footnote 28
Beyond the field of environmental history, new directions in the humanities have found other places to reside in Soviet studies. Studies of science fiction have turned toward eco-materialism and toward transhumanist and posthumanist approaches: Colleen McQuillen has proposed an eco-materialist reading of late-Soviet science fiction and has highlighted “the complex interplay of bodies and environment” in Pavel Amnuel’'s work; Elana Gomel has explored how Russian science fiction combined humanism with posthumanism.Footnote 29 In a more down-to-earth mode, Susan Reid, Alexey Golubev, and others have stressed the impact of material objects and human-made environments in supporting the sense of selfhood.Footnote 30 Choi Chatterjee together with Karen Petrone has outlined the wide range of social factors that impact subject positions:
Perhaps if we can situate the Soviet self along a continuum of the domestic setting, the intimate collective, the larger socially imagined realities of class, ethnicity, gender, religious affiliations, and nationality and explore how it intersects with the discourses and practices of the state, we might better be able to trace the individual's range of possible actions within his or her complex and multiple subject positions.Footnote 31
How, then, to conceptualize Soviet-era naturecultural subjecthood, while navigating the Cartesian trap that would overemphasize the rational consciousness at the expense of one's bodily situatedness in the world? Moreover, while renewing our attention toward the basic matter of existence, we also need to avoid the “romantic trap” of uncritically regarding Soviet-era subjects as living in harmonious unity with the forces of nature. What is needed, in principle, is rather simple: a more attentive eye toward the plurality of actual life, toward the fact that humans have always lived in relationship with the earth and everything that grows on it, and with non-human creatures of various kinds. Once the scholarly gaze adjusts its vision to see these aspects of human beings-in-the-world, they come to appear everywhere: in everyday practices, in fiction and in essayistic writing, in public discussions, in all kinds of cultural production.
Toward a Multiscalar Naturecultural Subjecthood: Bels, Kaplinski, and Methodological Premises
Critique of the Cartesian worldview and the dismantling of the nature-culture opposition were present in late Soviet-era articulations of selfhood, as were attempts to forge a worldview grounded, in the words of Estonian mycologist and science communicator Ain Raitviir, on the “ethical sense of unity with all nature.”Footnote 32 Raitviir criticized the Cartesian glorification of human minds at the expense of other living beings—and the corresponding demotion of those other beings as “soulless automata.”Footnote 33 The poet Jaan Kaplinski (1941–2021), likewise, equated Cartesianism with “outdated” and careless attitudes toward animals; he instead strove to promote a respectful and caring attitude toward all living beings.Footnote 34
Works by Alberts Bels (born 1938) and Kaplinski allow us to outline a late Soviet-era model of the multiscalar self, one defined in the context of the naturecultural continuum and through its relational ties to the surrounding environment. Both Bels and Kaplinski emerged as important critical voices in the 1960s and sustained their position through the 1970s and beyond.Footnote 35 Bels wrote conceptual fiction that focused on urgent social issues of the day and provided detailed cultural analysis; his slow-paced novels were often supported by sociological data, including lengthy passages of philosophical contemplation. Bels's novel Saknes (Roots, 1982) could be read as a semi-fictional ecological tract or as a manual for a forest worker: the primary storyline of the novel follows—in great detail—the lives of forest workers in the Latvian SSR in 1978–79. The novel displays deep concern about the state of local Latvian forests as well as the state of planet Earth, and is thus of particular relevance for this essay. Kaplinski, an Estonian poet, was among the leading critical thinkers in Tartu intellectual circles, a polyglot who read and translated from many languages and was later nominated for the Nobel prize in literature. He was deeply interested in aboriginal cultures in different parts of the world, yet also very much invested in modern poetry, and throughout his oeuvre he addressed environmental concerns. This article takes a special interest in his environmentally attuned essays from the late 1960s and 1970s.
The status of Bels and Kaplinski is quite different from the ordinary diarists who have often been under scrutiny in Soviet studies: both authors articulated well-grounded cultural critique and performed serious social analysis. It makes sense, then, not to treat Bels's and Kaplinski's writings only as primary sources for studying Soviet-era subjecthoods (as one might with Soviet-era diaries), but also as critical analyses that merit further elaboration.
This essay's analysis of Bels's and Kaplinski's model of selfhood considers three aspects in the buildup of the multiscalar self: (1) the scale of intimacy and the formation of the self through the affective and ideational relation to the surrounding environment; (2) care and reverence for life as the grounding attunement; (3) the tangled unity of the local and the intimate, the global and the planetary. The basic premises of the naturecultural “theory of the subject,” developed in the following sections, include an emphasis on multirelationality and fluidity: subjecthood is here understood not as a self-enclosed set of fixed characteristics, but as a space of relationality, with a great variety of constituents continuously contributing to the sense of self. In Judith Butler's words, “I am, quite fundamentally, occasioned by what is outside of me.”Footnote 36
A well-functioning self is composed of multiple relationalities and operates successfully in different overlapping registers—the self is multirelational. The multirelational self is multiscalar, as we will observe in the next sections, it can meaningfully make sense of itself on several scales of identification, from the intimate to the global and the planetary. Fields of relationality that contribute to subjectivation are in flux; borrowing from Maurice Merleau-Ponty, we can understand the trajectories of subjecthood as forming “knots of significations which will be unraveled and tied up again in a different way in a new network of knowledge and experience.”Footnote 37 From various spaces of relationality, certain relations can be foregrounded as constitutive, while leaving other relations in the shadows—a process of selection that accompanies any effort to turn the multiplicity of life into text, including Bels's fiction and Kaplinski's poetry and essays.
The Formation of the Self Through its Affective and Ideational Relation with its Environment, or, the Scale of Intimacy in Subject-Formation
For both Bels and Kaplinski, the developmental trajectory of a small child offers material for ruminating upon the role of intimate environments in the formation of subjecthood. Here, we should take into account that various building blocks in the formation of selfhood can be analyzed on the basis of three basic modes of encounter: (1) direct sensory contact, such as touch or vision, a material connection with things physically at hand—everyday objects, nearby environments, family, friends. These are entangled with (2) ideas, values, dreams, and imaginaries, and are colored by (3) affects, attunements, and emotions—awe, wonder, reverence, anxiety, fear, love, pain, loss, and longing. These encounters are made meaningful through discourse: for a modern self, it is close to impossible to escape the rule of language and verbalization, to step outside of meaning-making processes.Footnote 38 In the development of a child, both Bels and Kaplinski foreground the role of direct sensory contact and the affective bond created between children and the material presence of their direct surroundings.
In the autobiographical essay Mina (Myself, 1973), Jaan Kaplinski suggests that the surroundings during one's first years of life will provide a grounding role in subsequent formations of one's personality.Footnote 39 Kaplinski reflects on his own first surroundings as a child: he was born in the countryside, his family estate was seized by the German army in late 1943, and the Kaplinski family was given a substitute apartment in Tartu, which was destroyed later in the war. Kaplinski reminiscences and reflects on the formative influence of these early experiences:
Yet as the first and the most authentic environmental background, I still remember the house and the summery garden encircled by dark firs, separated from the rest of the world. . . . in retrospect, I realize that I have always longed to go back there; I have been, consciously and unconsciously, in search of the house, the garden, and the forest in the countryside.Footnote 40
The author then goes on to further describe his earliest memories as a two-year old, valorizing these as “most authentic”: the buzzing of bees around his grandfather's beehives, the midsummer atmosphere with its sharp contrasts between the heat of the sun and the coolness of shade, an old farm dwelling, a spacious garden by the house, the hedge of full-grown fir trees surrounding the garden and the dwelling—in short, a typical midsummer scene on a central-Estonian pre-Soviet farmstead.
Kaplinski spent his post-war childhood summers with relatives, in another old farmstead with a comparable atmosphere, and later, in 1970, after indeed spending years in search of a suitable place, he bought the old Mutiku farmstead to establish his summer-home there.Footnote 41 For Kaplinski, acquiring the Mutiku home resonated specifically as part of his quest for selfhood.Footnote 42 “What is me? How am I myself?”—in his 1973 essay, Kaplinski calls finding the answer to such questions “perhaps the most important thing that I have to do.”Footnote 43 Among all the potential building blocks of selfhood, Kaplinski foregrounds attentiveness toward natural environments, a lifestyle close to nature, and an affinity with one's surroundings: in the essay Mina these are connected to a child's primary impressions, imprinted in memory.
The novel Saknes (Roots, 1982) by Alberts Bels presents a “case study” similar to the one given by Kaplinski.Footnote 44 The first pages of Saknes present the coming-to-self-awareness story of little Jānis, whose childhood home (like Kaplinski's) is an old farm dwelling, which now serves as the forest district headquarters and provides housing for the chief forester (Jānis's father) and his family. The reader is informed that Jānis's “first and deepest encounter with the world” had happened when he awoke in his baby carriage, under the great oak tree, and had seen the oak tree branches intertwining and stretching upwards, their leaves moving slowly in the wind and making a peaceful, continuous rustling. “The world opened up for the boy through the deep-green crowns of the trees,” and the familiar faces of the father and mother “merged in the boy's consciousness with the dark green oak leaves.”Footnote 45 The narrator then proceeds to describe the gradual accretion of new elements to Jānis's world, from his wanderings around home, in the fields and in the forest, and then later also kindergarten and school.
We can deduce a preliminary theory of subjecthood from Bels's and Kaplinski's coming-to-awareness narratives: both envision the gradual formation of the subject from his or her primary contact with the surrounding world. Bels's poetic description is painted in harmonious tones and Kaplinski's is overshadowed by loss and nostalgia, yet both convey a culturally acknowledged logic of self-formation with deep roots in countryside life: there, the child is often taken along on caretakers’ daily tasks, and thus grows and develops in direct contact with natural environments. Bels's description in particular represents a common cultural practice, dating back to pre-Soviet eras and traceable both in folklore, visual arts, and fiction.Footnote 46 Such subject-formation foregrounds the role of natural environments on the scale of intimacy in subjecthood—there, the formative relations are those that pertain to one's direct sensory contact with one's immediate surroundings, together with one's primary human interactions.
Bels and Kaplinski thus propose a model of selfhood that extends beyond the body, to include the surrounding environment in a way that, in Kaplinski's case, makes one strive to return to such a surrounding in search of self-restoration or self-completion.Footnote 47 This line of thinking resonates with the concept of the self-world or Umwelt, developed by the Tartu University graduate Jakob von Uexküll (1864–1944), an important environmental thinker whose ideas were discussed during the late Soviet era also.Footnote 48 In a 1982 article for an Estonian popular science magazine, Horisont, Uexküll's framework was explained like this:
Uexküll tries to determine what in an organism creates an organic whole. And he concluded that this whole, this physiological building plan, includes, in addition to the body of the organism, the part of the environment that surrounds the organism also. . . . this surrounding part belonging together with the organism is the Umwelt.Footnote 49
Uexküll's concept of an Umwelt helps explicate Bels's and Kaplinski's sense of a subjecthood that exceeds the strict bounds of the body and takes account of the subject's relational bond to his or her surroundings, including the way the subject makes it meaningful for him- or herself.Footnote 50 The self is a relational entity that extends outward, into its “aroundness.”Footnote 51 From the perspective of subject formation, the process of shaping the chaos of the world into meaningful entities unfolds as part of the continual process of human self-formation. The creation of an Umwelt or self-world is at the same time also the process of subjectivation. In this process, some details of the world as chaos become foregrounded and arranged in a meaningful way, some others are lost, and some become cornerstones in the elaboration of one's sense of self.
From here, more questions follow: how do humans delimit the boundaries of their self-world? What role do affective linkages play in this process? How is the scale of intimacy in subjecthood, one's self-identification with one's primary surroundings, tied to the shared human world with its multiscalar accretions? How are particular models of selfhood connected to transnational networks of ideas? The next section focuses on the role of affect—here, feelings of awe and wonder—both in binding the subject together with its surrounding environment and in the circulation of transnational environmental thinking. One of the touchstones in this inquiry will be Albert Schweitzer's influential ideas about a reverence for life.
Care and Reverence for Life as Grounding Affective Attunements
The early pages of Bels's novel Saknes describe, in minute detail, the slow movement of two people through the forest at dawn, on Tuesday, April 24, 1979: Jānis Liepsargs takes his eight-year-old son to hear, for the first time in his life, the early morning song of a wood grouse. The wood grouse, a large bird with a majestic tail that can be fanned wide, is a rare sight, but this cautious bird stops singing and flies away at the least suspicious sound. In Bels's novel the boy follows his father into the forest, taking great care not to frighten the bird; both stay quiet as the cock makes clicking sounds and they move very cautiously, just a step or two, when the bird makes swishing sounds. They sense how the forest is alive and how it breathes. The boy takes care to precisely imitate his father's every move, to stop right when the father stops, and to move as slowly and quietly as the father does. Little Jānis is utterly disappointed at first, when he cannot catch the sound of grouse, even as his father points him the direction. As they get closer to the bird and the boy hears the song of the wood grouse, he feels as if the forest had become full of life. Moving very cautiously, they get quite close to the bird and admire the beauty of its feathers in the first rays of daylight.
This beautiful, languorous description, with its attentiveness to a sense of wonder, is presented mainly from the perspective of eight-year-old Jānis, full of excitement over his great adventure moving through the forest in early dawn hours. The whole seven-page passage is as much about the forest and the wood grouse as it is about the human relationship to the forest and its inhabitants, and about one's ability to hear, to listen, and to be both caring and attentive towards one's surroundings.
Again, Bels's novelistic world-building bears close similarity to essayistic writings by Jaan Kaplinski.Footnote 52 Kaplinski, too, writes in detail about human encounters with natural environments, using phrasing akin to Bels's, with an emphasis on the sense of wonder, on seeing more fully, and on the necessity of moving with cautious respect for the sensitivities of the world. In his 1972 essay Ökoloogia ja ökonoomika (Ecology and Economy), Kaplinski refers to a hazel grouse, a close relative to Bels's wood grouse:
Without even noticing we will start stepping very quietly, so as not to disturb the hazel grouse with chicks or the pike spying under the leaf of a water lily. We will become more modest, more cautious, and smaller. And yet we begin to see more, to partake in more than when we rushed through the forest and through the world, noisily and in a hurry.Footnote 53
In the 1972 essay, the attitude of wonder and care toward natural environments and toward all living beings is associated with Albert Schweitzer's dictum “Reverence for Life”—an attitude that, according to Kaplinski, many implicitly follow without the need to put it into words. “A person does not express or talk about things that are taken for granted,” explains Kaplinski.Footnote 54 Yet those who avoid disturbing the ants in their path or who do not kill a viper are proceeding from the impulse of care, awe, and reverence.Footnote 55
In his 1968 essay Eelarvamused ja eetika. Utoopilisi mõtisklusi (Prejudices and Ethics: Utopian Contemplations), Kaplinski explicitly opposes the Cartesian disregard for the non-human with Schweitzer's “Reverence for Life,” here explained by Kaplinski as “wonderment toward the life unfolding in all beings and the commitment to defend this life.”Footnote 56 For Kaplinski, “reverence for life” is understood as part of an ethical position that combines emotion and reason and that is highly critical of the “infantile” privileging of humans over other lifeforms.Footnote 57 Kaplinski envisions a utopian world where a peaceful balance is established in nature and in human-animal interactions: “Wild birds will fly in the homes of this future human being and deer and giraffe will peer inside the windows. There will be no substantial difference left between forest and park, as there will be no more difference between wild and domestic animals.”Footnote 58 The 1968 essay bears a “cautiously optimistic” tone: Kaplinski seems to be sincerely hopeful about the “progress of human conscience” over the ages and about the possibility of grounding human interactions with natural environments on a reverence for life.Footnote 59
Late Soviet-era environmental thought took inspiration from a diverse body of thinkers, but Albert Schweitzer (1875–1965) and his promotion of reverence for life made an especially distinguished contribution.Footnote 60 Kaplinski's contemporaries shared the poet's appreciation of Schweitzer's ideas: from 1965 onward, references to Schweitzer appeared frequently in the Estonian media, in various ecological discussions, literary analyses, pedagogical writings, and in broader cultural conversations. In 1969, in the journal Nõukogude Kool [Soviet School], Jaan Eilart even suggested supplementing school curricula with concrete pedagogical steps based on Schweitzer's ideas and promoting the general aim of “sustaining and developing maximum ecological diversity” as the main task “everywhere on Earth, in all continents, in all locations.”Footnote 61 In a similar spirit, Ain Raitviir wrote a lengthy essay about Schweitzer's life and thoughts and stated that “an ethical world-view is actually an ethical sense of one's unity with all nature.”Footnote 62 In 1985, Kalevi Kull and Rein Kuresoo credited Schweitzer for establishing “a potential foundation for modern ecological ethics.”Footnote 63
Schweitzer's popularity and influence in the USSR reached well beyond the Baltics; indeed his Baltic success relied on his legitimation by the centers of Soviet power.Footnote 64 Particularly after his death in 1965, Schweitzer, a promoter of peace and nuclear disarmament and an anti-colonial thinker, came to be highly regarded and widely translated in the USSR.Footnote 65 In the 1973 introduction to the Russian translation of Schweitzer's Kultur und Ethik (Civilization and Ethics), Vladimir Karpushin locates Schweitzer's ideas within the state-recognized Marxist-Leninist paradigm and claims Schweitzer as a critic of the “great social tragedy”—namely the cultural crisis of modern bourgeois society. According to Karpushin, “The way out of this crisis was provided by the theory of Marxism, the end to this tragedy of culture is brought by socialism.”Footnote 66 Such Marxist contextualizations affirmed Schweitzer as a thinker in tune with the values of the Soviet state.Footnote 67
Baltic environmental thinkers, for their part, did not duplicate Karpushin's effort to identify Schweitzer's critique as having special pertinence to bourgeois society in the west. Somewhat to the contrary, they identified themselves as living in the global world—not a socialist paradise—that was suffering “an ethical bankruptcy” that “threatens life on Earth with collapse.”Footnote 68 For Kaplinski, Raitviir, Eilart, and others, “reverence for life” served to bridge local and global ethical perspectives: it supported an articulation of subjecthood through its affective relationship to the surrounding environment, but also linked the subject and its self-world to global environmental ideas.Footnote 69 Such multiscalar subjectification will be further explored in the next section.
From the Local and the Intimate to the Global and the Planetary
Alberts Bels's novel Saknes includes a precisely dated storyline unfolding in Latvia, 1978–79, yet the novel also positions its characters within the larger continuum of life on earth, sometimes described in global and planetary terms. Human activities, the growing trees, the factory nearby, era-specific issues of pollution and shortages, the role of cultural memory in people's lives—all this is presented as forming one complex social and environmental life-system, symbolized through the image of roots that intertwine and even grow into each other. Roots also symbolize the hidden historical “depth” and the planetary scope behind concrete present-day phenomena such as Latvia's pine forests: the pine forests are not “just there”; they are produced by millennia-long climatological developments and are part of a planetary ecosystem.
One of the central passages in Saknes combines a scene of illegal tree-cutting with a discussion of global and planetary developments. The narrative voice gives a summary of the change in local climate conditions since the end of the Ice Age and recalls the first emergence of forests in the Baltic Sea region thousands of years ago. The narrator highlights the planetary importance of forests: “The mother of humanity is the ocean,” the reader learns, and yet the oceans are polluted. “Each year, nine million tons of waste are thrown into the Pacific Ocean. Thirty-nine million tons of waste are thrown into the Atlantic.”Footnote 70 The forest, another great producer of oxygen on Earth, as Bels's narrator points out, has remained relatively pure.Footnote 71
In the same passage, Saknes offers the image of a shared train ride as a metaphor for the interconnectedness of all life on Earth:
We all sit in a train.
What! Men are surprised.
This train is BIOGEOCENOSIS!
Never in our lives had we heard such a word!
The train is long and heavily laden. In the first car ride microorganisms, in the second—plants, then animals, and in the very last one, packed together like sardines in a tin—human beings.”Footnote 72
The narrator proceeds to describe the heavily laden train, suggesting that its cars are the product of climatological, geological, geographic, biological, cosmological, and agrotechnical conditions. This train of “biogeocenosis,” the train of the ecosystem, makes no stops on its journey through the millennia, and even the dead remain on board.Footnote 73 As the narrator points out, the harm done by the illegal cutting of young pine trees is not simply damage done to a few trees, but damage done to the ecosystem where humankind is bound together with microorganisms, plants, and animals. The vision of life thus presented in the novel is both multiscalar and intertwined: human selves and their actions are situated on both local and planetary scales, the scale of concrete trees in a forest, bound within the planetary scale of shared existence on Earth. Human selves are situated in concrete, at-hand locations, but they are also part of the planetary “train of life.” Such positioning also includes an implicit suggestion that, behind damaging incidents of forest-theft or industrial pollution, is a deficiency in planetary-scale thought, a mono-scalar, blinkered vision of life and one's position within it.
Kaplinski echoes these concerns expressed in Saknes, but the Estonian essayist also directly ties his critique of industrialization to questions of selfhood. An important theme in Kaplinski's explorations of selfhood can be articulated as the reach of one's self-world: in Kaplinski's view, developed societies, both capitalist and socialist, have constricted human consciousness. Kaplinski juxtaposes a caring attitude toward all living beings and natural environments—reverence for life—with the effort to accelerate economic growth in the industrial era, the production of both new needs and new products to satisfy these needs, and, as a result, cultural value-systems that place their emphasis on the accumulation of things.Footnote 74 In the essay Ökoloogia ja ökonoomika, Kaplinski writes:
We want what is beautiful and expensive to be our “own,” close to us, at the reach of hand and eye. . . . We dress well, we furnish our apartments as nicely as we can. If the house belongs to us, we embellish this, too, yet we relegate the street and the city to oblivion, extending hardly any care at all to the cultivation and beautification of landscapes beyond this narrow sphere—it appears that the limits of our selves can be measured within a couple of meters, sometimes perhaps a couple dozen meters, but rarely more.
It seems that the human being itself has, in recent centuries, suffered a significant contraction of its boundaries.Footnote 75
The reach of human self-worlds is historically conditioned and grounded in the sociocultural logic of a given society. Accordingly, Kaplinski poses a profound identification with the environment as characteristic of our ancestors in the pre-industrial era, such that the constitutive relationship between the self and its environment extended far beyond one's belongings and direct surroundings; industrial societies, by contrast, he poses as having brought about “the minimization of the human self.”Footnote 76 The diminished modern self is derived from its indifference toward environmental problems and an impoverished sense of responsibility: “Perhaps we have shrunk the self to its minimum, in order to shirk responsibility for our unecological deeds, to disavow them as at an ‘exterior’ remove.”Footnote 77 For the planet Earth to be a place for sustainable living, self-worlds need to be extensive. The sense of self needs to be tied to more than just a familiar sweater, the walls of one's apartment, the home-garden; in short, human selves need to adopt a more multi-scalar vision that includes larger, even planetary considerations.
The writings of Bels and Kaplinski present an environmentally conscious subject who emerges as multiscalar: a subject who identifies through his or her direct, affectively experienced environment, but who also realizes the intrication of local, global, and planetary processes. Such a subject-position includes, first of all, the scale of intimacy or the phenomenological scale: the belonging-together with one's directly sensible surroundings, including natural environments. The sense of wonder and a care-taking stance strengthens the affective link between the subject and its environment. In addition to the intimate-phenomenological groundedness of the subject, the imaginative extension of the human self-world scales up to assume global and planetary reach and includes a vision of the unity of all living and nonliving matter, as something calling upon one's resources of care. The binding link between different scales of subjecthood is provided by care and concern: in this sense, subject is constituted by relations of care, as these stretch from the intimate to the planetary and beyond.Footnote 78 The writings of Kaplinski and Bels skip across different scales, sometimes focusing on closely knit self-worlds, sometimes on the earthly as directly graspable and at the same time a metaphysical entity, and sometimes extending to embrace a planetary wholeness. The scalarity of selfhood is here not a neatly nested system; instead, subjecthood emerges as trans-scalar, and global processes reflected back in local circumstance. The global (conceived as distinct from the planetary) is predominantly the negative side of the story, the site of global pollution and devastation caused by industrialization driven by the desire for quick profit, a desire shared by both capitalist and socialist world orders.
This article has discussed in detail various imbrications among local, global, and planetary scales, without linking these to the national scale. In his environmental writings, Jaan Kaplinski leaves national particularities fully out of consideration. Bels's Saknes, however, occasionally underscores specifically Latvian attributes of the naturecultural unity presented by the novel. The national scale is activated in his reference to Latvian pines and Latvian forests, in his introductory histories of local animal species, and in his assertion of the importance of cultural continuity and transgenerational memory. Saknes presents its theme of roots and rootedness by way of condensed multiscalar imagery: the forester at the heart of the novel feels the Roots farm to be home in a most multifarious sense—a dwelling shared by a family, but also including a sense of “Latvia, Nature and the Earth.”Footnote 79 The chief forester at one point also recollects his father's words: “the forest is the cradle of our nation.” In a thoroughly naturecultural mode, the story of the nation is intertwined with its natural environment.Footnote 80 Somewhat distinct from the theme of naturecultural rootedness and continuity, Saknes also presents an ambiguous scale of economic reality that directly impinges upon experience—the scarcity of necessary equipment, the damaging impact of a nearby factory—but Bels desists from assigning any label to this scale, whether “Soviet” or any other indication of the state.Footnote 81
Kaplinski's writing also includes a cosmic scale, a critical vision of the Earth and global problems as seen from the perspective of outer space.Footnote 82 He warns against the possibility that human explorations of outer space might turn into another version of exploitative colonialism. The poet imagines alien cultures assessing the “cosmic ethical maturity” on Earth “according to our ability to sustain and protect everything that lives.”Footnote 83 The cosmic perspective displays human failures of care as an egregious ethical lapse: “Once we can accustom ourselves to thinking in a cosmic perspective, even if gradually, the misjudgments and inconsistencies in earthly matters appear in an even more disturbing and irrational light.”Footnote 84
Naturecultural Selfhood and Environmental Movements
One might wonder whether the Kaplinski-Bels model of subjecthood was an abstract elitist construction, a thing apart from actual practices in the life of society. Kaplinski and Bels were, after all, among the leading intellectuals of their era. Their writing was an act of constructing selfhoods, a selection from a multiplicity of possible subject-positions. In this respect, a poet, an essayist, the writer of a conceptual novel, a diarist—all are engaged in a similar project—they are constructing the self through writing.
It is true that not everyone was so intensely interested in questions of selfhood as Kaplinski or as comprehensive in judgment as Bels. Yet naturecultural multiscalar selfhood, articulated by Bels and Kaplinski, was rooted in widely shared environmental concerns of the era. These two authors were not exceptional voices; rather, they elaborated on themes that circulated both locally and globally during this period. Kaplinski and Bels voiced common cultural trends in linking the sense of self to a traditional farmstead or in expressing an affinity with natural environments. They articulated, in their own ways, common worries and cultural tropes, abundantly present in fictional writing, life-writing, and media discourse: as the ecological situation had become dire in many respects, environmental concerns came to be voiced more frequently and more openly.Footnote 85 In this respect, Baltic critics were participants in a global trend: by the mid to late twentieth century, obtrusive pollution in many parts of the world forced an environmental reckoning, the urgency of which spread both locally and globally. The environmental bestseller The Silent Spring (1962) by US author Rachel Carson and the Club of Rome report The Limits of Growth (1972) were widely discussed in the US, Canada and all over Europe; the dire import of these and similar texts came to influence debates in Soviet Russia and in the Baltics as well.Footnote 86 In Latvia, the Great Tree Liberation Movement, stemming from an indignation over the wanton destruction of great old trees, found widespread popular support in the mid-1970s, and led to both lively discussion in the press and grassroots efforts to locate these grand trees, prune away their undergrowth, and register them for legal protection.Footnote 87 In Estonia, the Estonian Nature Protection Society, founded in 1966, soon had over 15,000 members; by the mid-1980s, it was approximately 22,000.Footnote 88 One of its many achievements was the establishment of Lahemaa National Park in 1971, the first national park in the Soviet Union.Footnote 89 Latvians soon followed suit, establishing Gauja National Park in 1973.
Subjectivation with a marked environmental emphasis can manifest itself through divergent models of subjecthood and can rely on different modes of identification with one's environment. Russian village prose with its stark rural-urban opposition and its nostalgia for vanishing rural communities differed starkly from Kaplinski-Belsian naturecultural multiscalarity. Certainly, a nostalgia for rural authenticity was a cultural feeling shared by many in the late Soviet era: in Estonia, such feelings were typically channeled into a summer-home culture which provided accommodation for the dream of rural authenticity within modern urbanized society. In Latvian literature, village-nostalgia found explicit expression in novels by Ilze Indrāne, Haralds Gulbis, and others.
Conclusion: From the State-ideological Subject toward Multiscalar Naturecultural Subjecthood
This project has been motivated by the urgency of rethinking the role of academic scholarship today in light of anthropogenic climate change. How could the ethical necessity of rethinking humanness, necessitated by the present climate crisis, be reflected in research strategies and classroom discussions of earlier periods, such as the history of the Soviet Union? This essay suggests that one productive option would be to address questions of Soviet-era subjecthoods from the perspective of one's affective connections to natural environments, tracking and tracing the multiscalarity of subjecthood.
Soviet-era subjects did not make sense of their lives, aims, and accomplishments solely in relation to the Soviet state, but also in relation to things and relations closer at hand and in relation to ideas and conditions of a global and planetary scale. In some contexts, periods, age groups, and classes of people, the role of official Soviet discourse weighed more heavily in people's lives—but even so, a multiplicity of ideas and a mosaic of imaginaries was present in any era. While the subject versus state ideology model may address how people positioned themselves in relation to Soviet rule, such analyses should not hinder us from exploring other era-specific spectra of human subjectivity. Soviet-era selfhoods were formed, like other modern selfhoods, through relating, in certain ways, to things and sensations, to ideas, demands and values, to environments, institutions, and more. They were shaped by different relational fields, both spatial-material-sensorial and imaginary-ideological. There is no way to fully explore the trajectory of a subject-formation of even a single person, but it is fully feasible for scholars to articulate clusters of dominant themes and to outline common cultural patterns and models of subjectivation.
The ethical attitude of reverence for life and the widely shared concern about both local-level environmental damage and the future of the planet support a multiscalar naturecultural model of subjecthood, as this essay has shown. Jaan Kaplinski and Alberts Bels advocate for an understanding of selfhood as based on feelings of affinity with life on earth, supported by reverence and care. In their articulation, such selfhood appears as an ethically grounded way of living in the world. Different temporalities are combined in this model of selfhood: the global scale emerges through its historical development, the intimate scale as a sensed bodily presence, and the cosmic scale as both a warning and a possibility for the future. Here, one can distinguish between personal-phenomenological and pedagogical-prescriptive aspects in models of subjecthood: at the phenomenological level, this is about a deeply personal relationship to living beings and to the surrounding environment. At the pedagogical-prescriptive level, concern for the future of the planet is posed in opposition to the culture of consumption and industrial development, on account of their overexploitation of natural resources. At this level, the model of extended selfhood is presented as a social ideal and an aspiration, even as it also articulates a critique of the corrupt or constricted moral vision of those in power who are unwilling to act more decisively.
Finally, while this article followed a particular kind of late Soviet-era model of selfhood, grounded on the nature-culture continuum, many other grounding assemblages and specters of relationality were present as cultural possibilities for subjectivation in the 1960–80s. Both Bels and Kaplinski themselves also explored other subject-positions, including those dominated by urban modernity or family and fatherhood. Kaplinski and Bels, Schweitzer, and others were, of course, certain kinds of ideologists, critical thinkers who relied upon and learned from other thinkers as well as from what they experienced in their affective encounters in the world.