Spring Creek Podcast
This special edition of our Luminaries series focuses on creative work about watersheds. Today, in the final episode of these watershed-focused conversations, guest host Caitlin Scarano talks with Indigenous author and poet Rena Priest. Rena served as the 6th Washington State Poet Laureate and is the recipient of numerous awards and fellowships, including the 2024 Washington State Book Award, the 2020 Allied Arts Foundation Professional Poets Award, and the 2018 American Book Award. For this series, Caitlin kept returning to the question of what it means to tell the story of a river, or the infinite stories a watershed can hold. Rena Priest's latest book, Positively Uncivilized, is a collection of essays from a Lhaq'temish perspective on storytelling, settler colonialism, ecology, treaty rights, and salmon. The poetry collection gave Caitlin a framework she hadn't found anywhere else for thinking about reciprocity as an ethic for living within a watershed. Rena's insistence that "we are interdependent organisms, reliant on the health of the whole" was ever-present in Caitlin's research into the Skagit River watershed. "Luminaries" is produced by the Spring Creek Project at Oregon State University. This series invites people to share stories about writing and art that illuminates their environmental thinking or work.
34 episodios
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