Mapping Thoreau’s Sonderweb
Yet Thoreau is also attentive to the trails left by nonhuman animals; he walks ‘without crossing a road except where the fox and the mink do.’ Perhaps this is Thoreau partaking in 'sonderweaving’ since he verbalises his act of thinking about the nonhuman animals he ‘encounters’ on the sonderweb. While Thoreau admits that he ‘cannot easily shake off the village’ which precludes a more authentic connection with the non-human world, the act of walking nevertheless enables an ‘act of relationality’. That is to say, walking allows Thoreau to literally ‘weave’ his body through the world in such a way as to entangle himself with the paths created by others.
George Raptis (z5206747)