Couverture de Terra Stories

Terra Stories

Terra Stories

De : Giulia Gasparrini
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Terra Stories shares the stories that weave humanity into the natural world and ancestral wisdom. Here, you’ll hear about the power of storytelling, mythology, kinship with nature, eco-feminism and old, wise knowledge. This journey will empower you to use storytelling in your craft, reconnect to yourself and nature, helping you become an agent of change in tomorrow’s world. Cover: Beth Walrond Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.Giulia Gasparrini Science Sciences sociales
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    Épisodes
    • (25) 'The Scarab’s Chronicle'
      Sep 25 2025

      How much can a tiny insect tell us about our relationship with nature?


      This podcast episode unfolds as a chronicle—tracing one insect, the scarab, across time and place.


      From the banks of the Nile in Ancient Egypt, to the French Alps twenty years ago, to today’s Mediterranean shores, and even millions of years back, when a scarab’s body lay buried until archaeologists uncovered it.


      Why has an insect once worshipped as a god by our ancestors lost its place in our modern cities?


      What made it so important that our ancestors kept it so close? What wisdom does it hold? And how can we rebuild this relationship—not only with it, but with other living beings?


      ⭐ If you liked the episode, please share it and rate it 5 stars on your favourite platform.


      Sources:

      • https://ancientegyptonline.co.uk/khepri/

      • https://www.naturalhistorycuriosities.com/insects/scarab-beetles-and-their-meaning-in-the-ancient-egyptian-history/


      Cover: Illustration of Egyptian scarabs (public domain, from an early archaeological catalogue)


      Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

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      16 min
    • (24) 'Tell a Story or Die'
      Jul 23 2025

      We are in a world of mad kings. The ones that destroy life, extract more and more, leaving Earth empty.


      Lately, I keep asking: What shall we do? What are we doing wrong?


      If I had asked that question in the medieval Arab world, they might have said: Tell them a story. And they might have told me the story of Shahrazad, the woman who changed the mind of a mad king by telling him a thousand stories.


      Stories can change minds, worldviews. And worldviews shape our actions: toward care, kinship, and love for the natural world, or toward detachment, conquest, and destruction.


      So, what are the stories that could save humanity? And most of all, how do we shape them, as the storytellers we are? Why was the medieval Arab world, like many ancient cultures, so devoted to storytelling? And how did they understand the precious power it held?


      ⭐ If you liked the episode, please share it and rate it 5 stars on your favourite platform.


      Sources:

      • The Arabian Nights, translation by Malcolm C. Lyons

      • Ocean Vuong, 'A Life Worthy of Our Breath' On Being Podcast


      Cover: Die Favontin by Adolf Seel, 1883


      Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

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      21 min
    • (23) 'Daphne, Who Became a Tree; Apollo, Whom She Fled; and Ovid, Who Told Their Story'
      May 1 2025

      If a story reveals something about its characters, it also reveals something about the storyteller.


      The story you’re about to hear is no exception.


      But what could a story tell about the one who is telling it? You might ask. Well, what if, in this story, the storyteller was the Prince of them all? What if, thousands of years ago, he understood better than anyone what makes a story an invisible thread connecting humanity together? What if he told a tale you could still connect with today?


      His name was Ovid. And this podcast episode is about Daphne, who became a tree; Apollo, whom she fled; and Ovid, who told their story.


      ⭐ If you liked the episode, please share it and rate it 5 stars on your favourite platform.


      Sources:

      • The Metamorphoses by Ovid, translation by Mary M. Innes

      • The Epic of Gilgamesh, translation by Andrew George

      • The Masks of God, Volume 1: Primitive Mythology by Joseph Campbell

      • https://www.worldhistory.org/Melusine/#:~:text=According%20to%20the%20legend%2C%20and,accept%20her%20as%20she%20was


      Cover: Apollo and Daphne by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, 1743


      Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

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      30 min
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