Changing Tides, Alejandro Frid
Changing Tides, Alejandro Frid
List: $29.99 | Sale: $21.00
Club: $14.99

Changing Tides
An Ecologist's Journey to Make Peace with the Anthropocene

Author: Alejandro Frid

Narrator: Taran Kootenhayoo

Unabridged: 5 hr 15 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 06/09/2020


Synopsis

Change the story and change the future – merging science and Indigenous knowledge to steer us towards a more benign Anthropocene
In Changing Tides, Alejandro Frid tackles the big questions: who, or what, represents our essential selves, and what stories might allow us to shift the collective psyche of industrial civilization in time to avert the worst of the climate and biodiversity crises? Merging scientific perspectives with Indigenous knowledge might just help us change the story we tell ourselves about who we are and where we could go.
As humanity marches on, causing mass extinctions and destabilizing the climate, the future of Earth will very much reflect the stories that Homo sapiens decide to jettison or accept today into our collective identity. At this pivotal moment in history, the most important story we can be telling ourselves is that humans are not inherently destructive.
In seeking the answers, Frid draws from a deep well of personal experience and that of Indigenous colleagues, finding a glimmer of hope in Indigenous cultures that, despite the ravishes of colonialism, have for thousands of years developed intentional and socially complex practices for resource management that epitomize sustainability.
Changing Tides is for everyone concerned with the irrevocable changes we have unleashed upon our planet and how we might steer towards a more benign Anthropocene.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Hákon on December 09, 2022

I recently read Factfulness, which according to the authors is a book about facts, and how the world is actually better than we think it is. They managed show the world is better than we think (at least in the part that was about animals) through Pollyannaism, and selective use of data. To me that f......more

Goodreads review by Shae on September 04, 2023

Frid writes compellingly about changing the narrative that humans are inherently destructive, and the positive outcomes he and Indigenous nations in coastal BC have achieved by merging Traditional Ecological Knowledge and western science in working toward common goals of safeguarding fish and wildli......more

Goodreads review by Gwen on August 10, 2021

In a word - hopeful - about what the non-indigenous can learn from indigenous peoples about respecting and cultivating ecosystems. Alejandro Frid is an ecologist for First Nations of British Columbia working with them to regain control over their resources while also bridging their traditional knowl......more

Goodreads review by David P. on February 22, 2020

A lone from a student who guessed I might like this book about the intelligence of coastal communities in BC who are imagining a ‘more benign Anthropocene’ - I am always happy to spend time when authors work to create dialogue with science and indigenous knowledge and this book is a gem.......more