Professor Talbot Page's Environmental Economics students had a visit
from storyteller Jay O'Callahan this past November. The relatively
new discipline of Environmental Economics addresses environmental
problems with economic tools of analysis. What does that have to
do with stories?
"The fishery dilemma is an example of an environmental problem
exacerbated by normal economic policies," said Professor Page.
And that's where the storyteller comes in. Nationally known
storyteller Jay O'Callahan's newest story, The Spirit of the
Great Auk, is about the near extinction of the codfish. Professor
Page, a regular attendee of O'Callahan's storytelling workshops,
called O'Callahan's new work a "modern environmental myth."
"It transforms the nature of the problem beyond naive blaming,"
said Page, who invited the storyteller so that his students could
experience the fishing industry's economic/environmental problem
from an artist's point of view.
Three years in the making, O'Callahan's The Spirit of the
Great Auk is the story of Richard Wheeler's 1500 mile kayak
journey from Canada to Cape Cod, an odyssey in which he meets
the plight of the ocean and fishing communities head on.
Ostensibly, Wheeler tries to bring attention to the tragic extinction
of the great and noble auk bird, but he discovers that he has
become the fisherman's champion of the codfish.
"Tell them," say the people of every fishing village where narrator
Wheeler stops. "Tell them that we're fishing out the ocean. We're
catching the juveniles. The codfish aren't coming back."
On his journey, Wheeler discovered not just sea birds, but fish,
could become extinct. He saw the sea itself suffering from abuse.
The poignant dilemma of the fishermen, who are fishing both
themselves and the codfish into extinction, was an eye-opener
to Professor Page's students.
"Students often bring a very black and white picture of blame
- 'us' versus 'them'", said Page. "Jay O'Callahan helped them
experience the problem with a story that is truer to reality than
bare facts."
Brown University Economics and Environmental Studies
December 1996
Used by permission
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