Karen Tei Yamashita's Through The Arc Of The Rain Forest

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As a result of rapid overconsumption, just three decades has allowed one third of the Earth’s natural resources to be wiped out. In Through the Arc of the Rain Forest, Karen Tei Yamashita uses the commodification of natural resources to show the impact of overconsumption on the environment. She depicts feathers and the Mataco as resources that are taken advantage of, and then communicates how the overproduction of these products impacts the environment by bringing disease and bacteria into the narration. Feathers are portrayed as natural resources that are carelessly manipulated. J.B. Tweep, an employee of GGG, becomes convinced that feathers will be a popular market item and searches for ways to retail them. The narrator states, “J.B. Tweep …show more content…

GGG markets feathers as a solution to many common problems and as a result, they become a mass produced product. They begin to state that the feather can be an aid to various medical problems and is even recommended by medical professionals. By stating that the feather has begun to take many roles in society regarding healing and medicine, and then describing the demand that results from this, Yamashita describes feathers as becoming a resource that has been manipulated into a different property. The feather went from being one man’s personal method of soothing to a widespread craze that led to the mass production of the resource. The Mataco is presented as a resource that is exploited for many uses. While the Mataco is later proven to be plastic, readers are given the initial impression that it is a stand-in for some aspect of nature such as the rainforest. First, the Mataco is targeted as a resource for various products. J.B. Tweep exclaims, “‘We’re the ones that have cracked the code in drilling the [Mataco], and now we’re on the verge of controlling it.people think it should be preserved.when they hear that we want to start mining this place, we’ll have an uproar similar to this old hubbub over the destruction of the rain forest or what’s left of it”

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