“Around Noon” at Ideas Center Radio 90.3   WCPN.org
In this interview Jamaica Kincaid talks about gardens and clarifies that
Antigua doesn’t have gardens as you think. There are the botanical  gardens that have plants that are not from Antigua and represent the  spread of Empire,  and then there were the gardens similar to her  mother’s which were grown to for food, medicines and sometimes because  they were attractive.
The Garden of Eden
In the Bible it says that first there was the Tree of Life and there was  the Tree of Knowledge. The Tree of Life, represents what is grown for  survival and this is what people of Antigua grew. Knowledge comes after,  and that is more like the botanical gardens, where people have the  luxury to grow for beauty and uniqueness.
She remembers being taught and made to memorize the poem, “I wandered  lonely as a cloud”, by William Wordsworth in school. (She mentions that  she wrote about this in one of her books (Lucy)) When she came across  these flowers in Central Park in New York, she wanted to crush them all.  “I hated them,” she says. Without knowing it, she understood that the  flowers were representative of dominance and the spread of the Imperial  project. She says that now she has planted 10,000 daffodils in her  Vermont garden “in honor of Wordsworth”, and that she has “a daffodil  tea party” every spring.
Living half of her time in California she has developed a fascination  with the San Andres Fault in California. The natural environment  interest her and she reiterates that
gardens for people with a lot of money. And that she was requested to  speak at a botanical society that was full of “amusingly silly people”  and that one, Mr Frank Cabot asked her to speak in Charleston, North  Carolina. Upon her arrival there she saw a stature celebrating the vice  president of Monroe, she found the statue and what it represented about  slavery offensive. There was a talk about a garden that people who were  going off to be incinerated made, a beautiful garden, and Kincaid felt  that there was this up close history that people were ignoring. That the  people there celebrating gardens did not make the connection between  the history of the nearby plantation, Middleton, and the political  violation. Mr. Cabot said he was sorry that he have invited her to speak  because she introduced a political element to the organization’s talk.  Kincaid told him that just outside was a pile of rubble that Sherman  (the Union general) had brought down, as an aside she said, “I like  Sherman very much.” She thought about the beautiful butterfly shaped  garden and the rice field that was cultivated by slaves. She said that  Mr. Middleton who owned the plantation where they were celebrating the  after party was one of the signers of the Declaration of Independance.  Kincaid was trying to communicate that there was no separation between  the gardens and politics that “politics is not removed from gardening.”
She brought the topic back to contemporary times and mentioned the wind  farms that are important to provide natural clean energy would also  “make a number of birds extinct.” Her point being that though “the  greenness of the earth is important…” it comes at a costs. She said, “I  think that we Americans are not used to thinking that things costs  something. We don’t think it comes at a cost at all.”
I thought the interview caught Kincaid at a period of transition in  her thought and life. She uses the the pronoun “we” when referring to  herself, which signifies a joining into this national group. She is  moving her life over to California and is beginning to concern herself  with the preoccupations of that part of the world, for example, the way  the earth moves is fascinating to her and the transfer of her insight  about the environment is broadening. She is accepting a position at  Claremont College, a liberal arts college, and will begin to make her  concerns felt there.