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Loving and knowing in indigenous ways of life. A conversation with Melissa Nelson

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Manage episode 388494069 series 2846308
内容由Mark Vernon提供。所有播客内容(包括剧集、图形和播客描述)均由 Mark Vernon 或其播客平台合作伙伴直接上传和提供。如果您认为有人在未经您许可的情况下使用您的受版权保护的作品,您可以按照此处概述的流程进行操作https://zh.player.fm/legal

“A worldview that understands indigeneity is a paradigm of regeneration, a worldview rooted in enduring values in what we call our original instructions, common themes of reciprocity, of gratitude, of responsibility, of generosity, of forgiveness, of humility, of courage, of sacrifice, and of course love. But these values are not just words, we need to live them.” Melissa Nelson
In this conversation with Melissa, we explore various facets of what she summarises in the quote above. The original instructions of indigenous knowledge are rooted in a reciprocal and relational way of being in the world, an integration of knowing and loving. The creatures of the world, with the landscape and sky, are living records preserved in oral traditions, spoken by participating in rituals and stories.
We discuss the consciousness prompted by creatures and places and how that varies between different peoples, across place and time. We look at the notion of the erotic and the role of human beings within the wider ecology, and also how a synthesis between modern scientific and indigenous ways of knowing might weave together to enrich our love and, therefore, being in the world.
We talked everything from eagles and turtles to love and participation.
Melissa K. Nelson is a Native ecologist, writer, media-maker and Indigenous scholar-activist. She is the President/CEO of The Cultural Conservancy, which she had directed since 1993. In 2020 she joined Arizona State University as a Professor of Indigenous Sustainability, after working since 2002 as Professor of American Indian Studies at San Francisco State University.
0:00 Introductions
01:13 What is indigeneity?
02:33 The names of tribes and nations
04:27 Stories in the landscape
06:06 The teaching of the eagle
07:17 Relational and reciprocal worldviews
10:25 Bridging worlds and the notion of love
12:47 Oral cultures and universals
15:01 The sun and turtles: beyond metaphor to participation
25:20 The link between love and knowledge
29:21 Expanding the erotic
32:42 The role of human beings
38:01 Science and indigenous ways of knowing

  continue reading

165集单集

Artwork
icon分享
 
Manage episode 388494069 series 2846308
内容由Mark Vernon提供。所有播客内容(包括剧集、图形和播客描述)均由 Mark Vernon 或其播客平台合作伙伴直接上传和提供。如果您认为有人在未经您许可的情况下使用您的受版权保护的作品,您可以按照此处概述的流程进行操作https://zh.player.fm/legal

“A worldview that understands indigeneity is a paradigm of regeneration, a worldview rooted in enduring values in what we call our original instructions, common themes of reciprocity, of gratitude, of responsibility, of generosity, of forgiveness, of humility, of courage, of sacrifice, and of course love. But these values are not just words, we need to live them.” Melissa Nelson
In this conversation with Melissa, we explore various facets of what she summarises in the quote above. The original instructions of indigenous knowledge are rooted in a reciprocal and relational way of being in the world, an integration of knowing and loving. The creatures of the world, with the landscape and sky, are living records preserved in oral traditions, spoken by participating in rituals and stories.
We discuss the consciousness prompted by creatures and places and how that varies between different peoples, across place and time. We look at the notion of the erotic and the role of human beings within the wider ecology, and also how a synthesis between modern scientific and indigenous ways of knowing might weave together to enrich our love and, therefore, being in the world.
We talked everything from eagles and turtles to love and participation.
Melissa K. Nelson is a Native ecologist, writer, media-maker and Indigenous scholar-activist. She is the President/CEO of The Cultural Conservancy, which she had directed since 1993. In 2020 she joined Arizona State University as a Professor of Indigenous Sustainability, after working since 2002 as Professor of American Indian Studies at San Francisco State University.
0:00 Introductions
01:13 What is indigeneity?
02:33 The names of tribes and nations
04:27 Stories in the landscape
06:06 The teaching of the eagle
07:17 Relational and reciprocal worldviews
10:25 Bridging worlds and the notion of love
12:47 Oral cultures and universals
15:01 The sun and turtles: beyond metaphor to participation
25:20 The link between love and knowledge
29:21 Expanding the erotic
32:42 The role of human beings
38:01 Science and indigenous ways of knowing

  continue reading

165集单集

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