New Radio Program Series on Ethnobiology and Our 2010 Conference
September 9, 2010
"EXPLORING ETHNOBIOLOGY III"
Web Link: http://www.cjly.net/deconstructingdinner/090910.htm
Download Audio Link: http://media.libsyn.com/media/deconstructingdinner/DD090910.mp3
Stream Audio Link: http://www.cjly.net/deconstructingdinner/audio/DD090910.m3u
In May 2010, Deconstructing Dinner travelled to Vancouver Island where two international conferences on ethnobiology were being hosted. Ethnobiology examines the relationships between humans and their surrounding plants, animals and ecosystems. Today, more and more people are expressing an interest to develop closer relationships with the earth. This leaves much to be learned from the research of ethnobiologists, and in particular, from the symbiotic human-earth relationships that so many peoples around the world have long maintained.
On this part III of the series, we listen to two presentations that share research into the relationships between indigenous peoples and marine life in what is now called British Columbia and Alaska.
Click on the web link above to read more.
Deconstructing Dinner is a syndicated weekly one-hour radio show and podcast produced in Nelson, British Columbia at Kootenay Co-op Radio CJLY. The show is heard weekly on 41 Canadian and 8 American radio stations. www.deconstructingdinner.com
July 22 2010
"EXPLORING ETHNOBIOLOGY II: NANCY TURNER"
Web Link: http://www.cjly.net/deconstructingdinner/072210.htm
Download Audio Link: http://media.libsyn.com/media/deconstructingdinner/DD072210.mp3
Stream Audio Link: http://www.cjly.net/deconstructingdinner/audio/DD072210.m3u
In May 2010, Deconstructing Dinner travelled to Vancouver Island where two international conferences on ethnobiology were being hosted. Ethnobiology examines the relationships between humans and their surrounding plants, animals and ecosystems. Today, more and more people are expressing an interest to develop closer relationships with the earth. This leaves much to be learned from the research of ethnobiologists, and in particular, from the symbiotic human-earth relationships that so many peoples around the world have long maintained.
On this part II of the series, we listen to segments from a one-on-one interview with Nancy Turner of the University of Victoria. Nancy is one of the most well-known ethnobiologists in Canada and Deconstructing Dinner's Jon Steinman sat down with her in the community of Tofino to learn more about what ethnobiology is, why the field is an increasingly important one to pay attention to, and what we all might learn from the many indigenous peoples who ethnobiologists work with.
Also on the show - a recording of a presentation by Cheryl Bryce and Pamela Tudge who are examining how the indigenous peoples living in what is now the City of Victoria might reinstate traditional harvesting practices of an important traditional food - camus.
Click on the web link above to read more.
June 3, 2010
"EXPLORING ETHNOBIOLOGY I: PRESERVING TRADITIONAL FOODWAYS AMONG INDIGENOUS YOUTH"
Web Link: http://www.cjly.net/deconstructingdinner/060310.htm
Download Audio Link: http://traffic.libsyn.com/deconstructingdinner/DD060310.mp3
Stream Audio Link: http://cjly.net/deconstructingdinner/audio/DD060310.m3u
As people throughout the Western world are increasingly seeking to reconnect with their food, there's a lot to be learned from the many peoples who have long maintained these dynamic relationships between their sustenance and the earth. Ethnobiologists research these very relationships through a scientific lens and it's a field of study bringing together many disciplines like anthropology, ecology and conservation to name just a few.
Click on the web link above to read more.