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    Indigenous Pasts and Presents (Pt.2)

    enFebruary 09, 2020
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    About this Episode

    In this episode, we hear the perspectives of three influential leaders from three different tribes: Jason Baldes (Eastern Shoshone), Lynnette Grey Bull (Northern Arapahoe & Hunkpapa Lakota), and Len Necefer (Navajo).

    Each will offer their perspective on the through-line from past to present and into the future. We will notice that in many ways this line finds its way following efforts of education, coalition building, and healing.

    We hope that after hearing this episode listeners will be inspired to get involved with indigenous issues in communities near where they live!

    For more info on our three guests, visit our website: yonderlies.com!

    Recent Episodes from Yonder Lies: Unpacking the Myths of Jackson Hole

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    Without a doubt, our community has its work cut out for us in terms of affordable housing now, and in the years to come. Is it possible to create a world where all of our community members can choose to affordably live in Jackson, if they want? What actions are being taken? What changes need to be made?

     

    Thanks to April Norton, Housing Director at Jackson/Teton County Housing Department, Skye Schell at ShelterJH, and and Kelsey Yarzarb for thought-provoking and inspiring interviews!

    Latino Voices in Jackson

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    In this episode, we explore the experiences of Latino community members in Jackson, Wyoming.

    What's behind (what's up with) the gap between perceptions and reality when it comes to Jackson's demographic?

    Alina Indracas and Lina Collado share their stories of living Latino in Jackson and how they hope to see Jackson grow into the future.

    “Attention is the Beginning of Devotion”: A Conversation with Sportswoman-Conservationist Marcia Brownlee

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    Kanye West and Wyoming

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    On the slated release date of his new 2020 album Donda: With Child we thought it would be good to tell the story of perhaps the most famous Wyomingite ever. No, we're not talking about Dick Cheney or Jackson Pollock, but Kanye West.

    In this episode, we cover the story of one of the most talented musicians in a generation. We'll cover where Kanye came from, his upbringing, his vaulting into the musical pantheon, his subsequent resentment of being pigeonholed as only a musical genius, and what his bringing of his Yeezy brand to Cody, Wyoming may or may not mean for the town.

    What's the problem with bear management?

    What's the problem with bear management?

    This is an episode about a theory:

    Environmental problems don't exist out there, but inside of us. 

    We come to see problems in the world when our expectations about how the world should work are not met.

    Our expectations about how the world should work are shaped by the myths — the patterns of understanding we unconsciously use to understand the world — that live inside of us.

    And therefore situations we call "problems" arise when our myths fail to explain it, and conflicts often arise over environmental problems when myths are divergent and unrecognized.