Monty Don, the nation’s gardener, has a bit of a bee in his
bonnet about begonias. A rather longstanding
(article from 2000, and there are others
since then) and particularly buzzy bee at that. Reading the article from 2000,
he’s not keen on houseplants, either.
I was going to let it go. Each to their own, etc. We all have
likes and dislikes. Obviously, what I like is right, and what you like is
wrong, but I will allow you to grow it in your own garden. However, when ‘the
nation’s gardener’ (how Monty might be viewed, having the ear of the national
press and a weekly BBC2 gardening show) sweepingly dismisses not just one genus
(for there are lots of types of begonias) but also a way of gardening (tender bedding
– how ‘common’), then I think it begs a little closer examination.
Perhaps I am reading too much into this, but when the
article from 2000 contains the following quote, I feel we are starting to touch
on my discomfort with Monty’s views:
“The honest truth is that I think if I really had no
garden - no possibility of an
allotment, no little yard, however dingy - I would
forgo house plants and buy
cut flowers daily. When we lived in London, I would
often go and cut a bunch of
flowers from the garden to take as a present when
going to friends for dinner. “
So there we have it. If Monty could imagine living in a
squalid hole with no outside space, no rolling acres of pleached hedges and box
and views to the countryside, no wildflower garden with writer’s shed, no
glasshouses, he would buy flowers on a daily basis. That’s great. He would be
lucky that he can do that. Perhaps, however, some of those people who do live in houses or flats with
or without a dingy little yard cannot afford a couple of pounds a day, or even
a month, on fresh flowers (and we can be pretty sure that Monty wouldn’t be
buying a couple-of-quid bunch of daffs from the local supermarket).
Perhaps, just perhaps, a few quid spent on begonia tubers, and a six-pack of trailing lobelia, and you
have a summer of bright, vibrant colour. Goodness, sometimes you can even
coordinate the colours of these flowers, as heaven forfend that we have a bit
of colour clash. I mustn’t be too harsh on Monty, as one reason he scorns the
tender bedding is that it is often sold too soon and can end up curling up its
toes if planted out too early. But his attack on such bedding is more than
that, and perhaps I’m over-analysing this, but to me it relates to class and
taste.
I’ve been reading quite a lot about Pierre Bourdieu
recently. Primarily because I’m writing an 8000 word essay on how his concepts relate
to student choice in higher education. How does this link to begonias? Well,
Bourdieu explored a lot about class, and ‘reproduction in society’ – how it is
that those with power and influence maintain that power and influence, and
those without stay without (with a few minor exceptions). One area he explored,
particularly in his book Distinction, is taste and culture. What is good taste,
how society view taste, how the concept of ‘good taste’ is maintained (forgive
me if this is a bit of a rubbish explanation – I’m still grappling with his
theories).
What Bourdieu suggested is that taste is ingrained within
our social place in society. We have class-based predispositions to taste,
based on what we absorbed through our upbringing and social setting. I was
brought up in an initially working-class environment. My household, my friends’
households, didn’t grow up listening to classical music, going to plays,
visiting museums. Whilst I don’t know much of Montague Don’s background,
it would appear that he had a different, established middle class, upbringing
from me, attending various private schools and Cambridge University. He had
different experiences of taste within his upbringing. According to Bourdieu, in
this established middle-class upbringing, he will have developed greater
cultural capital.
Capital forms the foundation of social life, according to
Bourdieu. There are several types of capital - the one most easy for us to
understand is perhaps economic capital – those with more economic capital are
those with more money. Cultural capital is composed of the symbolic elements that
one acquires as part of a particular class – the mannerisms, skills, behaviours
and, importantly here, tastes that a particular class
shares. Those with greater cultural capital can buy something
like this because it is kitsch and makes us laugh knowingly and ironically
(always with that understanding that someone inferior actually likes that stuff
– the humour is there because we see ourselves as superior to the person who
buys it without irony). Someone with a bit less cultural capital would scorn it
as hideous. But to someone with even less cultural capital, it is a pretty and
useful part of the household decoration, and not a piece of ironic kitsch.
So, begonias. Very much like a frilly toilet roll cover.
Bright, flouncy, often in clashing colour schemes. Abhorrent to the good taste
of the middle classes. The middle classes who can choose to have bright
colours, but instead talk about their deep, rich, jewel-like hues:
"It's a
gesture against all that pastel good taste," says Monty Don. "The
cottage-garden
style has gone as
far as it can and disappeared up its own backside."
Ahh, the pastel good taste of the cottage garden of the
1990s has been replaced in the middle-class hierarchy of cultural capital by
jewel-like colours. Not garish. No, instead rich, sumptuous colours.
This
begonia looks pretty rich, jewel-like and sumptuous to me. But it’s frilly.
It’s a tender annual. The working class buy them to plonk in the ground:
No expert knowledge needed for these. No understanding of
garden design or complex horticultural growing conditions. Anyone can grow them
– even those people (the working class) with no taste, no back yard (however
dingy), just a pretty basket possibly
shaped like a puppy (bought non-ironically). How common.
If not begonias, it would be some other form of plant or
gardening practice. Take pelargoniums. I’m not saying Monty doesn’t adore the zonal
pelargonium bedding display. But many, perhaps
middle class, keen gardeners would not give them the time of day, and instead
would rave about the beauty of Pelargonium
ardens – to many non-horticulturalists a rather sparsely flowering and
nondescript plant. But, if you have a bit of cultural capital, you can expound
on the simplicity of the flowers, the richness of the colour, the ‘natural
beauty’ of it, compared the cheap, common, blousy bedding pelargonium.
So, let’s not be snobby about plants. Let’s not be snobby
about people who grow plants, even if they buy them ready-formed and bung
them in a bog (and we’re not talking the sort of bog Rodgersias thrive in).
You might abhor
the meerkat, but some adore it.
Celebrate everyone’s taste, and make a little room in your
life for begonias. Or maybe I've just read a little bit too much into this... what do you think?
5 comments:
Well said HM! I've had a long rambling think about this since I started my public planting thread on my blog many moons ago. I used to snigger over some of the brighter seaside schemes, but then realised I was imposing my own preconceptions (plus those of others who love to say they're right) on what I was seeing.
What I appreciate now is the desire to make places better, more looked after, and more inclusive. That's a quality which should be encouraged, not sneered at.
I have to say I am not keen on houseplants or bedding either but this is mainly because they need looking after. I do however love trailing lobelias and pelargoniums for a bit of instant colour in the summer. I also love the displays of bedding in parks etc, my own garden is decidedly pastel except for a blast of colour to brighten up the end of the garden with purple elderflower and smoke bush with day lilies and roses.
I think there is a possibility that culture and class come into it but then again it was poor rural working class people who began cottage gardening in the first place.
Hi VP, thanks for your comment. I used to think like that, too. But, as you say, flowers are better than no flowers, whether tender and clashing or subtle and sophisticated.
Hi Debbie, thanks for your comments too. I agree, they're not the easiest. And you're certainly right that working class gardeners grew flowers in their cottage gardens. I think the cottage garden style, however, developed more when taken on by the middle and higher classes, when it could become prettier than the odd few useful flowers. There's a great book I reviewed relatively recently on this blog, about the gardens of the British working classes. Fascinating stuff.
My Mum's garden is full of the most beautiful begonias in sunset shades. She absolutely loves them. We spend a happy time on a Sunday going round the garden and looking closely at all the plants, comparing their slight colour differences and the shapes of their flowers. We don't mind at all that Monty doesn't like them. We think everyone is entitled to their opinion. To be honest, we are not all that keen on some of his ideas. But again- no two gardeners ever have the same idea. That's the beauty of having your own private space, whether it be a balcony, patio or an acre- it's your own haven to do with what you please. And we intend to carry on with our glorious begonias.
Post a Comment