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Potawatomi botanist Robin Wall Kimmerer discusses the philosophy of a “gift economy” in her latest book The Serviceberry, expanding on the theme of reciprocity from her 2013 book Braiding Sweetgrass.
As Robin Wall Kimmerer says in “The Serviceberry ... are the tree’s gift to the world. In nature, Kimmerer says, plants, insects and animals have a generous relationship.
When Emergence magazine asked “Braiding Sweetgrass” author Robin Wall Kimmererto ... wildflower honey — Kimmerer says we need to be grateful for those gifts. “Consumption is fueled by ...
A dozen years ago, Robin Wall Kimmerer submitted an ... Her work is “an invitation into reciprocity,” Kimmerer says. “In return for these spectacular gifts of the Earth, say to yourself ...
Robin Wall Kimmerer’s book ... The book explores the lessons and gifts that the natural world, especially plants, have to offer to people. Kimmerer writes that improving our relationship with nature ...
Instead, Robin Wall Kimmerer’s essay collection had been ... of readers to look at a strawberry and see a heart. To see a gift. It changed that local publisher, too. “I can’t think of ...
What’s the best book you’ve ever received as a gift? Some years ago ... I think I felt the biggest awakening to its role when quotes were projected on buildings across the U.K. at COP 26 ...
Much has already been written about the unlikely success of the scientist, naturalist, and Indigenous elder Robin Wall Kimmerer. Braiding Sweetgrass, her meditation upon the interconnectedness of ...
Indigenous ecologist and MacArthur Genius, Robin Wall Kimmerer has a brand new book, "The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World." Robin never set out to be the celebrity ...
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