top of page
background_iso_edited.png

1. A Big Listening Project

1. A Big Listening Project

1. A Big Listening Project

1. A Big Listening Project

7. A Voice for the Land

Episode Summary

In the 1930s when America was deep in the disaster of the Dust Bowl, Wisconsin professor and wildlife expert Aldo Leopold brought a new way of thinking about how people engage with nature. Studying the dynamics of soil erosion and people’s behavior, he made suggestions for change that led him to the White House to meet the President.

 

Leopold faced a personal crisis too, while writing his way toward a new understanding of our relationship with nature. When the Federal Writers’ Project recruited him to write for the WPA Guide to Wisconsin, the picture he described in the guide’s section on Conservation marked a path toward the modern environmental movement. In this episode, Leopold’s biographer, Curt Meine, connects the dots to Earth Day and a new generation of environmentalists.

Aldo Leopold_edited.png
Acast_button.png
Google Play_button.png

Speakers

Curt Meine, biographer

Douglas Brinkley, historian

Tim Hundt, journalist

Further Reading

WPA Guide to Wisconsin

A Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold

Aldo Leopold: His Life and Work by Curt Meine

You Are Here: Poetry in the Natural World edited by Ada Limón

Credits

Hosted by: Chris Haley

Directed by: Andrea Kalin

Producers: Andrea Kalin, David A. Taylor and James Mirabello

Writer: David A. Taylor

Editor: Ethan Oser

Assistant Editor: Amy A. Young

Story Editing: Michael May

Additional voices provided by:

Tim Lorenz and Susanne Desoutter

Featuring music and archival material from:

Joseph Vitarelli

Bradford Ellis

Pond5

Library of Congress

National Archives and Records Administration

Wisconsin Humanities

Also featuring the song “Wisconsin” performed by Madilyn Bailey. Written by Madilyn Bailey, Martijn Tienus, John Sinclair and Clifford Golio, and produced by Clifford Golio and Joseph Barba.  Find the full song here and visit her Spotify artist page to hear more.    

Produced with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities and Wisconsin Humanities

Subscribe for updates!

Thanks for subscribing!

bottom of page