originally published 7/1/2000

Gayle Brandow Samuels, author of Enduring Roots: Encounters with Trees, History, and the American Landscape (Rutgers University Press, 1999), examines the ways in which trees have served as anchor-points for memory and identity in American culture. Communities have planted and viewed trees as living memorials of their own stories, griefs, traditions, and self-understanding. Samuels describes how trees and other particular features of each community’s landscape contribute to community members’ sense of belonging over time, a sense that is more important and yet more tenuous in our age of mobility, dislocation, and alienation. This interview was originally featured on Volume 44 of the Journal.

9 minutes

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