What if a river is alive–but we’ve forgotten how to recognize it?
This is the radical idea at the heart of the global “rights of nature” movement, which seeks to grant rivers, forests and ecosystems legal standing. Rooted in ancient traditions and emerging in modern law, it challenges the notion of nature as property and a resource to be exploited.
In “Is a River Alive?”, acclaimed writer and explorer Robert Macfarlane travels to remote waterways in Ecuador, India and Canada, meeting mycologists, Indigenous river-keepers, and activists who see the natural world as animate and ensouled. Known for celebrated books like “Underland,” “The Old Ways,” and “Mountains of the Mind,” Macfarlane blends storytelling, natural history and philosophy in an invitation to reimagine our relationship with the living Earth.
If rivers have rights—and perhaps even a kind of consciousness—how would that change the way we see the world?
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00:00:00 Introduction
00:03:00 Is a River Alive?
00:10:50 Ecuador's Cloud Forest
00:19:40 Chennai's Dying Rivers
00:24:15 Wild River in Quebec
Wonder Cabinet is hosted by Anne Strainchamps and Steve Paulson. Find out more about the show at https://wondercabinetproductions.com, where you can subscribe to the podcast and our newsletter.