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Arts & Ideas

Slow Film and Ecology

Arts & Ideas

BBC

Society & Culture

4.2599 Ratings

🗓️ 16 June 2022

⏱️ 46 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Can a 40-hour film of a Massachusetts garden or a project documenting rice growing over 40 years help us to understand our planet better? Who makes and who watches such projects? Matthew Sweet is joined by film historian Becca Voelcker who has watched projects recorded in Japan, Colombia, Scotland and America; Thomas Halliday, whose book Otherlands charts the changes in the earth's ecologies through deep time; and by environmentalist Rupert Read, who is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of East Anglia and has been thinking about what an eco-spirituality would look like. Plus, artist James Bridle, whose book Ways of Being investigates how far beyond humanity we can extend concepts like 'person', 'intelligence', and 'solidarity'.

Producer: Luke Mulhall

Transcript

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0:00.0

Can I just say?

0:01.5

You're about to listen to a BBC podcast.

0:04.0

It's such a wonderful listen.

0:05.6

So nice.

0:06.5

There are loads more like it on BBC sounds.

0:08.8

Different paces, different heights.

0:10.6

The roof is buckling.

0:11.9

Where you can also listen to live sports commentary.

0:14.2

It's right foot goes for goal.

0:16.7

And then enjoy even more podcasts full of analysis and reaction to the big stories.

0:21.7

The stat that is astonishing is they ended with the lowest amount of possession.

0:25.2

And she's had to live with that.

0:26.8

So if you love sport, a passion, it's almost like a religion.

0:29.7

Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:31.7

Sort of expecting that every week now.

0:35.8

BBC Sounds, music, Radio, Podcasts.

0:39.8

This is the Arts and Ideas podcast, and I'm Matthew Sweet, and we've got millions of years

0:45.0

to cover all the way from mammoth migrations to incredibly long films about crop

0:51.3

cultivation. I can promise you that it'll be at least as exciting as watching

0:55.9

rice grow and probably more so. Hello, Donald McLeod here and I'm interrupting your podcast

1:01.8

listening to tell you about something else I think you might enjoy. Ray Fulm Williams can

1:06.0

claim to be Britain's favourite classical composer, But what keeps us coming back to his music

...

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