The devil gets all the good topography

A man in California thinks that having a mountain named Mount Diablo has negative effects. (Also linked here.)

“Words have power, and when you start mentioning words that come from the dark side, evil thrives,” Mijares told the Contra Costa Times. “When I take boys camping on the mountain, I don’t even like to say its name. I have to explain what the name means. Why should we have a main feature of our community that celebrates the devil?”

Back in the mid-1980s when I was in graduate school, I wanted to write a paper on how so many interesting Earth features in the United States had “devil” in their names. For instance, a side canyon to the Arkansas River north of here is called “Devil’s Hole,” also known as “Big Hole.” And of course there is Devil’s Tower.

I got busy and never wrote the paper–I could not fit it into any of my course work. But I still think that there is something to be said about Americans’ ambivalent relationship to the landscape, which is both sacralized and mistrusted in our mythic mind.