Omslagafbeelding van de show Spring Creek Podcast

Spring Creek Podcast

Podcast door Spring Creek Project

Engels

Technologie en Wetenschap

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Over Spring Creek Podcast

This podcast is produced by the Spring Creek Project, an organization at Oregon State University that sponsors readings, lectures, conversations, residencies, and other events and programming on issues and themes of critical importance to the health of humans and nature. Our mission is to bring together the practical wisdom of environmental science, the clarity of philosophy, and the transformational power of the written word and the arts to envision and inspire just and joyous relations with the planet and with one another.

Alle afleveringen

34 afleveringen

aflevering Luminaries Watershed Edition: Caitlin Scarano with Rena Priest artwork

Luminaries Watershed Edition: Caitlin Scarano with Rena Priest

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.

19 mei 2026 - 15 min
aflevering Luminaries Watershed Edition: Caitlin Scarano with Christian Murillo artwork

Luminaries Watershed Edition: Caitlin Scarano with Christian Murillo

This special edition of our Luminaries series focuses on creative work about watersheds. Today, in part three of these watershed-focused conversations, guest host Caitlin Scarano talks with Christian Murillo, an award-winning photographer. Christian has worked with National Geographic, Harvard University, and the Smithsonian in his journey to explore the simultaneous power and fragility of nature, particularly within the context of climate change. His book, Soul of the Skagit, tells the story of the Skagit River, starting from its glacial headwaters all the way down into Skagit Valley and the Salish Sea. The story unpacks our place within the natural world, exposing, and at times celebrating, the nuanced relationships that make the Skagit so special. "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.

7 apr 2026 - 25 min
aflevering Luminaries Watershed Edition: Caitlin Scarano with Amy Gulick artwork

Luminaries Watershed Edition: Caitlin Scarano with Amy Gulick

Welcome back to the special edition of our Luminaries series that focuses on creative work about watersheds. Today, in part two of these watershed-focused conversations, guest host Caitlin Scarano talks with author and photographer Amy Gulick. Amy's images and stories have been featured in Smithsonian, Audubon, National Wildlife, Sierra, and Outdoor Photographer. Her award-winning books include The Salmon Way: An Alaska State of Mind as well as Salmon in the Trees: Life in Alaska's Tongass Rain Forest. Their conversation focuses on Salmon in the Trees, a luminary book for Caitlin's work and thinking about watersheds. The two talk about how this idea of "salmon in the trees" is far more than a metaphor, but an ecological reality that speaks to the interconnection so often taken for granted in our understandings of watersheds. By homing in on the great journey of salmon in Alaska's Tongass National Forest — from freshwater streams to the sea and back again — and on salmon's connection with bears, forests, and ourselves, we gain insights into what a watershed is and how taking care of our watersheds is itself a continuous journey. "Luminaries" is produced by the Spring Creek Project [https://prax.oregonstate.edu/initiatives/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.

6 jan 2026 - 27 min
aflevering Luminaries Watershed Edition: Caitlin Scarano with Lynda Mapes artwork

Luminaries Watershed Edition: Caitlin Scarano with Lynda Mapes

Welcome to the first episode of a special four-part edition of our Luminaries series that focuses on creative work about watersheds. This special edition has been curated by Caitlin Scarano, a recipient of the 2024-25 Public Humanities Collaboratory Watershed Fellowship. Caitlin is a writer and poet whose current project explores cultural, political, and ecological interrelationships within the Skagit River watershed, from the dams of its upper reaches out to the Salish Sea. During this four-part series, she interviews four writers and artists whose work on watersheds are luminaries for her. Today, Caitlin speaks with author and longtime environmental journalist, Lynda Mapes. Over the course of her 27-year career as a reporter at the Seattle Times, and as the author of seven books, Lynda has earned numerous awards, including the Kavli Gold Award for Science Journalism from the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a National Outdoor Book Award, and the Washington State Book Award for nonfiction. In her work, Lynda centers connections between people and the natural world. Following a confluence of storylines about one of the largest dam removal projects in the world on the Elwha River, Lynda connected deeply with this watershed and the people who care about it. Caitlin talks with Lynda about her reporting and writing, and the ethic of relationality behind them, that led to the book Elwha: A River Reborn. "Luminaries" is produced by the Spring Creek Project [https://prax.oregonstate.edu/initiatives/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.

4 dec 2025 - 23 min
aflevering The Art of Reconnection: Daniela Naomi Molnar and Danielle Vogel artwork

The Art of Reconnection: Daniela Naomi Molnar and Danielle Vogel

In the final episode of "The Art of Reconnection" series, co-host Daniela Naomi Molnar speaks with poet and ceremonialist Danielle Vogel [https://www.danielle-vogel.com/] about the scope, power, and possibility of language. Danielle is an experimental poet who is committed to an embodied, ceremonial approach to poetics and relies heavily on field research, cross-disciplinary studies, inter-species collaborations, and archives of all kinds. Her installations and site-responsive works are often extensions of her manuscripts and tend to the living archives of memory shared between bodies, languages, and landscapes. She is an associate professor at Wesleyan University and the author of several poetry collections, including A Library of Light, Edges & Fray, and Between Grammars. Daniela and Danielle's conversation is an ode to the power of language — how the written and spoken word rings throughout the body, how it connects with extremely subtle forms of language both inside and outside our bodies, and how writing, editing, and reading become a ceremony. Their conversation ranges from darkness to lightness, from cellular activity to glacial activity, from the personal to the collective. They celebrate the way language acts as a mediating agent between our material and immaterial worlds, allowing us to connect to and therefore mend our interior lives and our environments. Daniela and Danielle invite us to wonder: How can language help us touch time? How do syllables and syntax carry memory in the same way a human body or a geologic body might? And how can becoming aware of the embodied nature of language help us connect across time, across lives, and across bodies? This podcast series was produced by the Spring Creek Project [https://prax.oregonstate.edu/initiatives/spring-creek-project], an initiative of the Patricia Valian Reser Center for the Creative Arts at Oregon State University. The series was created in collaboration with The Arts Center [https://theartscenter.net/] in Corvallis, Oregon.

6 dec 2024 - 1 h 7 min
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