TY - JOUR
T1 - Gifts from the Sentient Forest
T2 - Biocultural heritage and human-tree relations in Northern Finland
AU - Ryan, John
AU - Joy, Francis
N1 - The research is the second publication addressing bioculturral heritage and ongoing plight of trees and forests in northern Finland.
PY - 2026/1/2
Y1 - 2026/1/2
N2 - Forests face myriad threats globally including in Northern Finland, a relatively remote region celebrated as Europe’s last wilderness. Alongside the increasing imperilment of forests, however, lies a growing body of research indicating how trees respond sensitively to environmental change. The term forest sentience signifies the ability of trees to feel, sense, experience, behave, react, express, and remember. The article presents an analysis of the conceptual, methodological, historical, and cultural underpinnings of the project Gifts from the Sentient Forest (GSF) based in Northern Finland. GSF problematizes the construction of Northern Finland as a wilderness and places greater emphasis on the region’s botanical-cultural heritage informed by Indigenous environmental knowledge. Framing Northern Finland as heritage and homeland, the article offers an overview of three approaches advanced in the project to stimulate creative explorations of forest sentience: cultivating seasonal awareness, pattern-thinking through pareidolia, and remembering (with) trees. Through an emphasis on Northern Finland, we argue that forest sentience should be recognized as a conservation value alongside aesthetic, cultural, educational, recreational, scientific, wilderness, and other values. In this way, forest sentience provides a basis for countering narrow utilitarian views of trees, recasting wilderness as biocultural heritage, and preserving knowledge of the region’s endemic seasons.
AB - Forests face myriad threats globally including in Northern Finland, a relatively remote region celebrated as Europe’s last wilderness. Alongside the increasing imperilment of forests, however, lies a growing body of research indicating how trees respond sensitively to environmental change. The term forest sentience signifies the ability of trees to feel, sense, experience, behave, react, express, and remember. The article presents an analysis of the conceptual, methodological, historical, and cultural underpinnings of the project Gifts from the Sentient Forest (GSF) based in Northern Finland. GSF problematizes the construction of Northern Finland as a wilderness and places greater emphasis on the region’s botanical-cultural heritage informed by Indigenous environmental knowledge. Framing Northern Finland as heritage and homeland, the article offers an overview of three approaches advanced in the project to stimulate creative explorations of forest sentience: cultivating seasonal awareness, pattern-thinking through pareidolia, and remembering (with) trees. Through an emphasis on Northern Finland, we argue that forest sentience should be recognized as a conservation value alongside aesthetic, cultural, educational, recreational, scientific, wilderness, and other values. In this way, forest sentience provides a basis for countering narrow utilitarian views of trees, recasting wilderness as biocultural heritage, and preserving knowledge of the region’s endemic seasons.
KW - biocultural heritage
KW - endemic seasons
KW - forest sentience
KW - memory work
KW - plant perception
KW - Sámi culture
KW - wilderness discourse
U2 - 10.1080/23311983.2025.2610929
DO - 10.1080/23311983.2025.2610929
M3 - Article
SN - 2331-1983
VL - 13
JO - Cogent Arts & Humanities
JF - Cogent Arts & Humanities
IS - 1
ER -