“Stories, even tales, are made to weave a relationship with the environment around us. From the moment I know the story of the tree, the plant, the flower, the insect and I give it meaning in my daily life, I invest it with a spirit. So, I can’t treat it as an object that I can take, that I can steal for my personal satisfaction. »
(Rebroadcast from 04/12/2023)
In his “Tales of the Wise Men of Amazonia”, Pierre-Olivier Bannwarth makes us see visible and invisible worlds in which humans and non-humans perceive each other. A story that turns out to be marvelous, tinged with humor or cruelty, just like the setting of these stories, the jungle. The guardians of the forest, heroes of these extraordinary fables, invite us to discover: a mode of perception to be preserved, to be constantly renewed, between earth and sky.
Guest :
This week in Flea in the ear , Lucie Bouteloup “pull the devil by the tail”. A much less cheerful expression than it seems. The explanations with Catherine Moryauthor of the work HASthe joy of French expressions published by Larousse.