Rebecca Solnit: Hope After the End
Wonder Cabinet
Wonder Cabinet Productions
4.8 • 1K Ratings
🗓️ 14 February 2026
⏱️ 38 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
How do you deal with the emotional toll of living in a time of dissolution? Social scientists use the term "polycrisis" to describe the kind of cascading, overlapping failures that can lead to systemic collapse, and it’s hard not to see the symptoms of a dying world order in events unfolding around us. But maybe what we’re witnessing is actually grounds for hope. In a forthcoming book "The Beginning Comes After the End," writer and activist Rebecca Solnit makes the case that something is dying, all right — because something better is being born. A rising worldview that embraces antiracism, feminism, environmental thinking, Indigenous and non-Western ideas, and a vision of a more interconnected, compassionate world.
Solnit is an engaged writer and intellectual in the tradition of Barbara Ehrenreich, Susan Sontag and George Orwell. Her new book picks up where her earlier bestseller “Hope in the Dark” left off — with an argument against despair and historical amnesia. In this conversation, we explore the extraordinary scale of progressive social, political, scientific and cultural change over the past century, the roots of Solnit’s stance of “pragmatic, embodied hope,” her thoughts on “moral wonder, “ and her years in San Francisco’s underground punk rock scene. She also tells us what she’d put in our own wonder cabinet: an AIDS Memorial Quilt square sewn by Rosa Parks.
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- To The Best Of Our Knowledge — Tending a wartime garden: what Orwell’s fascination with roses tells us about the human need for beauty
- Rebecca Solnit’s newsletter
- Pre-order “The Beginning Comes After the End," due out March 3, 2026.
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00:00:00 Introduction
00:04:00 A Land Back Ceremony
00:08:05 Progress in Disguise
00:18:35 Hope and Interconnection
00:29:45 Defiant Hope
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Wonder Cabinet is hosted by Anne Strainchamps and Steve Paulson.
Find out more about the show at wondercabinetproductions.com, where you can subscribe to the podcast and our newsletter.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Welcome to Wonder Cabinet. |
| 0:02.0 | I'm Anne Strait Champs. |
| 0:05.0 | And I'm Steve Paulson. |
| 0:07.0 | Where do you turn when wonder feels out of reach? |
| 0:11.0 | When your country's at war with itself. |
| 0:13.0 | When American cities look like they are under siege, and you feel helpless, even while you're glued to the news. |
| 0:20.0 | At times like these, wonder can seem like a trivial emotion, irrelevant, even escapist. |
| 0:26.2 | But maybe it can also be a doorway to a better future. |
| 0:30.0 | Today, writer and activist Rebecca Solnett joins us to talk about the moral value of wonder |
| 0:34.9 | and a long arc of progress. |
| 0:37.9 | You know, we had a profound cultural change, which was so slow and incremental. |
| 0:42.8 | It often feels like nobody really noticed. |
| 0:45.6 | And I feel like the opposite of a Paul Revere, not running around saying something just happened, |
| 0:51.4 | but saying something has been slowly happening and this moment is |
| 0:55.4 | radically different than 30 or 50 or 100 years ago. |
| 1:00.1 | Okay, let's pause for a second. |
| 1:02.0 | We should remind people who Rebecca Solnit is. |
| 1:04.3 | Right. |
| 1:04.9 | She's a writer and public intellectual and activist who has been involved in environmental and |
| 1:10.1 | human rights issues for more than three decades. |
| 1:12.9 | I'd say she's one of the most influential writers on the left. She's written more than 20 books. |
| 1:19.1 | Some of them are famous, hope in the dark, the field guide to getting lost. Men explain things to me. |
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