Get together, share ideas, listen, think, grow.

Support Oregon Humanities.

Sign up to be the first to hear about what we’re doing around the state.

Digest

Recent posts

War and the Notion of Home

August 26 2010
Annie Dubinsky

I was sitting in my office last week reading a final report that one of our recent Responsive Program Grant recipients submitted when I realized how much I don’t know about war,... More

Our Shared Stories

August 13 2010
Raina Hassan

Last night, my husband, Amos, and I were cruising around on Netflix when we settled on an instant-play movie called Boys Don’t Cry. When it came out in 1999, I meant to go see it... More

New People

August 05 2010
Brian Doyle

Hmm. The moments that most changed the way I think about the world, o dear sweet jesus yes I can tell you those moments, with glee and gaping, still. There were three of them,... More

Long for this World

July 02 2010
Dave Weich

If developments in science could extend your life by five or more healthy, vital years, would you opt in? Probably, right?

Ten weeks ago, my company took on a project for a New... More

What Rises Up to Meet Us

June 23 2010
Carole Shellhart

After bicycling to Oregon Humanities to lead a weekly staff yoga session, our fearless yoga leader Maggie admitted that she was wearing borrowed pants. Not from her sister or her... More

Is Local Always Good?

June 09 2010
Reiko Hillyer

There’s an old joke: Did you know that in China they call Chinese food “food?” We could revise this joke to consider our current love affair with “local food.” It would go... More

The Only Blame

June 01 2010
Thorne Anderson

Last month, Sweden-based wikileaks.org published a classified US Army helicopter gun-camera video on youtube, and my inbox immediately filled with friends and acquaintances and... More

Lessons from Manno

May 24 2010
Apricot Irving

When my family moved back to Haiti, I was fourteen, the reluctant daughter of a missionary. When I was six, Haiti had felt like paradise: mangoes fell ripe from trees, kamion... More

The Place I Call Home

April 26 2010
Kimberly Howard

There are some days that roll out like a promise. Other days you turn the corner to unexpected joys. And still others where the people you meet along the way surprise you into... More

Democracy and The Big Sort

April 15 2010
Cara Ungar-Gutierrez

I’m reading Bill Bishop’s The Big Sort: Why the Clustering of Like-Minded America is Tearing Us Apart. I’d been meaning to pick this book up for about a year now and, as soon... More

Pages:  <  1 2 3 4 >  Last »

The Oregon Humanities Blog

Observations from our staff and colleagues.

Rethinking the Possibilities

My organization, Ecotrust, recently conducted a survey. We asked thousands of people, “Has the world entered a new era?” More than 80 percent of respondents said yes. When we asked people to describe the era, two related themes emerged: connectedness and interdependence.

The way people perceive the world is changing. Once, the world seemed to be divided into clear sectors: For-profit, nonprofit, local, national, global, sustainable, and so on. Now, all of those sectors seem to be conflating. Sustainability is present in all sectors. The slow-down, go-local mindset of the slow food movement is infusing everything from banking to finance to construction to culture writ large. Portland-based Sustainable Harvest, which promotes earth-friendly coffee systems, is an exemplar of the new world order. Sustainable Harvest seems like it would be a nonprofit. It’s actually a successful for-profit that’s part-local, part-national, and part-global.

Underpinning all of this change is one thing: story. When 80 percent of survey respondents say we’re in a new era, they are reconsidering the current mythos and story of America. Waves of people don’t just idly sign-up for the idea that a new era is upon us; that is a powerful belief, and there has to be a reason for it. The clues to this shifting perspective lie in the complex stew of a collapsed economy, climate change, political and cultural upheaval, waves of global innovation, and a less-powerful America. Faced with all of this, how can people not rethink the era and ask, “What have we created in America, and does it still work?”

Perhaps no one understands all of this better than Andrew Revkin of The New York Times. Each day, he posts the world’s latest status-quo-busting idea on his DotEarth blog, which explores innovations at the intersection of people, profit, and planet. On a daily basis, he challenges the way all of us look at the world. Do you think methane is just the world’s second most important heat-trapping gas behind carbon dioxide? Revkin wrote a story about turning it into a commodity. Want to know why the word “climate” is not present in the title of America’s pending climate legislation? Revkin can tell you.

Revkin’s become so good at what he does that he recently drew the ire of Mr. Status Quo himself, Rush Limbaugh. When Revkin suggested in a blog post that humans are hurting the planet, Limbaugh suggested that Revkin kill himself. That way, said Limbaugh, there would be one fewer person hurting the earth. All of this, of course, is a compliment to Revkin. If he weren’t so good at his job, Limbaugh wouldn’t care.

Nearly twenty organizations, including Ecotrust and Oregon Humanities, are bringing Revkin to Portland on November 10 to challenge Oregonians to rethink the way they view the state, and the world. Revkin is coming here to help us explore new possibilities for our collective future.

Revkin’s talk is free to the public, but tickets are required and available at the Portland State University box office. Revkin will explore the stories we Oregonians tell ourselves about the future. With three billion more inhabitants due on the planet within forty years, the stakes of such a talk couldn’t be higher, the challenges couldn’t be harder, and rewards couldn’t be greater.

Seth Walker
About Seth Walker

Seth Walker is director of marketing and communications for Ecotrust.

05 November 2009 | Posted by Seth Walker in Events New Ideas Special Projects
Permalink | Comments? (0 so far)

Add a comment

Oregon Humanities welcomes your commentary. We encourage lively public discourse and civil debate, but please be respectful in expressing your views.

Name
E-mail address*
Location
Web site


Captcha instructions.

Archive

Organized by category or date

By category
By date
2011
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • Jun
2010
2009
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • Sep
  • Oct
  • Nov
  • Dec