For The Wild – Détails, épisodes et analyse
Détails du podcast
Informations techniques et générales issues du flux RSS du podcast.

For The Wild
For The Wild
Fréquence : 1 épisode/10j. Total Éps: 405

For The Wild is a slow media organization dedicated to land-based protection, co-liberation, and intersectional storytelling. We are rooted in a paradigm shift away from human supremacy, endless growth, and consumerism. Our work highlights impactful stories and deeply-felt meaning making as balms for these times.
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Liens partagés entre épisodes et podcasts
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See all- https://www.instagram.com/stories
3188 partages
- https://www.instagram.com/hundredwaters
4 partages
- https://www.patreon.com/forthewild
798 partages
- http://patreon.com/forthewild
5 partages
- http://www.patreon.com/forthewild
2 partages
- https://jonmarro.com/
125 partages
- https://sophiestrand.com/
42 partages
- https://belonging.berkeley.edu/
27 partages
Qualité et score du flux RSS
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See allScore global : 38%
Historique des publications
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PLANTS ARE POLITICAL on the Lifeway of Olive Trees S1:1
Saison 1 · Épisode 1
lundi 8 décembre 2025 • Durée 39:15
“The moment people are disconnected from their land and from the plants around them, it's easier to control them because they don't feel the spiritual connection to the land.” —Aya Gazawi Faour, Olive Odyssey Co-Founder
In For The Wild’s new series in collaboration with Olive Odyssey, we hear from their co-founder, Aya Gazawi Faour, who shares about plants indigenous to the Palestinian landscape and their deep ties to culture, resistance, and enduring lifeways.
In this opening episode, Aya shares how olive trees shape Palestinian life through everyday routines and long-held traditions. Families structure their seasons around trips to the groves and the olive press, gathering to harvest, share meals, and pass down knowledge. Even in dense urban areas, many keep a single olive tree on a crowded balcony as a living reminder of home. Olives are rooted in memory, community, and resilience and remain deeply defining across the region. This powerful aspect of culture goes far beyond the material. It is a sacred connection to the land and its abundance, a means of making community both with neighbors and with the world, and a crucial reminder of resistance and resilience.
Let this conversation be an invitation to look more closely at the lands and living beings of Palestine. If Aya’s stories moved you, take the next step: learn from the farmers and stewards keeping these lifeways alive. Explore the work of Palestinian growers, deepen your understanding of their traditions, and support their harvests through Olive Odyssey. Every gesture of connection helps nourish a culture, a landscape, and a people rooted in resilience.
Olive Odyssey brings together farmers from across Palestine with a shared purpose: to tell the story of the Palestinian people through olive oil. Their mission is simple yet powerful — each bottle reflects a deep connection to the land and a commitment to sustainable, community-centered practices. To learn more about the farmers, their methods, and to source olive oil and recipes, visit https://oliveodyssey.com.
Plants Are Political is based on Olive Odyssey’s series by the same name.
Learn more at https://www.forthewild.world
Credits
Music for this episode was composed by Doe Paoro from her album “Living Through Collapse.” For The Wild is created by Ayana Young, Erica, Ekrem, Julia Jackson, and Victoria Pham.
ILLUMINATING WORLDVIEWS on The Art That Reclaims Us S1:4
jeudi 23 octobre 2025 • Durée 56:53
ILLUMINATING WORLDVIEWS on The Art That Reclaims Us S1:4
In this resounding end to our Illuminating Worldviews series, Ayana speaks with artists Dr. Aubyn O’Grady and Jackie Olson about collective art and creative processes. Aubyn and Jackie share about their work on The Willow Basket Project at the Yukon School of Visual Arts and explore the ways that art can root us in place, support mining reclamation work, and even build bridges with unlikely allies.
Through this project, they invite dialogue between artists, miners, and community members, reimagining mined landscapes as spaces of regeneration and cultural reconnection. This episode serves as a homage to how creative work can support healing for the land and open new pathways of relationship and understanding.
As we conclude this series, we sit in deep gratitude for the land that made this series possible and for all of the guests, community members, and team members with Illuminating Worldviews who brought it to life. This episode, and the series as whole, stand as a testament to the importance of this vital collective work.
Learn more at https://forthewild.world.
Credits
This series was produced thanks to the generous support of the team at Illuminating Worldviews, held by the RIVER collective and Northern Council for Global Cooperation.
♫ The music from this episode is “After the Rain” by Cole Pulice courtesy of Leaving Records, “So Long Favorite” by Chaz Prymek, and “Spinning Sphere” by Lior Holzman.
This episode was created by Ayana Young, Erica Ekrem, Julia Jackson, and Victoria Pham.
Earthly Reads: Céline Semaan on A Woman is a School S1:4
Saison 1 · Épisode 4
mardi 18 février 2025 • Durée 29:21
Join us for the fourth episode of our new Earthly Reads series. In this episode, we are joined by the incredible Céline Semaan, founder of Slow Factory and author of A Woman is a School.
Sharing stories from her childhood in Lebanon and across her lifelong work towards justice, Céline gives us a look at what it means to be a hakawati (storyteller). Céline asks listeners what it means to have faith in times of crisis, how to commit to your morals in the face of suppression, and what it can mean to use learning as a tool for liberation. This conversation is a reminder of the role that reflection and memoir play in service to creating systemic change.
Earthly Reads is a podcast series and online book study featuring conversations with some of our favorite authors including adrienne maree brown, Marcia Bjornerud, Alexis Pauline Gumbs, Prentis Hemphill, Tricia Hersey, and Céline Semaan. This episode offers a taste into some of the incredible live conversations that will take place throughout the book study. For more details about the series and to purchase access to the full study, visit forthewild.world/bookstudy.
Céline Semaan is a Lebanese-American designer, writer, artist, speaker, and advocate working at the intersection of environmental and social justice. Céline, is the founder of Slow Factory, a 501c3 public service organization addressing the intersecting crises of climate justice and social inequity — filling the gap for climate adaptation and preparedness, building community power through open education, narrative change, and regenerative design.
The music featured in this series is by More Eaze, Ohma, Cole Pulice and Maylee Todd from the compilation Staying: Leaving Records Aid to Artists Impacted by the Los Angeles Wildfires courtesy of our partner Leaving Records.
Dr. MIMI KHÚC on Claiming Unwellness /304
Épisode 304
mercredi 14 septembre 2022 • Durée 01:09:24
Dr. BRETT STORY on How We Belong to Each Other /303
Épisode 303
mercredi 7 septembre 2022 • Durée 01:07:23
CLAUDIA SERRATO on Earth-Centric Gastronomy /302
Épisode 302
mercredi 31 août 2022 • Durée 01:11:59
ANG ROELL on the Relations of the Beehive /301
Épisode 301
mercredi 24 août 2022 • Durée 55:15
Dr. BAYO AKOMOLAFE on Coming Alive to Other Senses /300
Épisode 300
mercredi 17 août 2022 • Durée 01:08:06
Dr. CLINT CARROLL on Stewarding Homeland /299
Épisode 299
mercredi 10 août 2022 • Durée 01:05:06
ALEXIS SHOTWELL on Resisting Purity Culture /298
Épisode 298
mercredi 3 août 2022 • Durée 58:43









