All This Life Here with Jesse Callahan Bryant

By: Jesse Callahan Bryant
  • Summary

  • I'm a PhD student in Sociology at the Yale School of the Environment and do other things too, like rock climbing and politics. I really like talking to people about things like the environment and culture and science. Good dialogue unfolds slowly. It's not linear. And that's what this show is: dialogue. I'm just going to bring people on to chat and make things up in between us. DIY vibes.
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Episodes
  • A Study of White Nationalist Avatars
    Oct 10 2024

    This is an experiment. This is an AI-generated podcast from a draft manuscript from a paper I just submitted for review. It uses Google's new very improved NotebookLM.

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    10 mins
  • The Influence of the Nature-Culture Dualism on Morality
    Nov 8 2023

    This is an audio version of my new chapter with Justin Farrell in the new Handbook of the Sociology of Morality, V2 (2023) called "The Influence of the Nature-Culture Dualism on Morality." The new handbook was edited by Steven Hitlin, Shai M. Dromi, and Aliza Luft and is out from Springer-Verlag New York, LLC.

    Abstract:

    Nature and culture are perhaps the two most consistent moral categories in Western thought. And yet, despite their stability, what nature and culture represent within a given moral system varies widely. In this chapter, we argue that the nature-culture dualism (“NCD”) has a fundamental impact on the moral imagination of different societies, and that this relationship has been underappreciated by sociology. To illustrate our argument, we trace the evolution of nature-culture dualism (“NCD”) from Greek and Roman thought, through Medieval Christian thought, and into the Modern era, from which sociology emerged. We show how in each era different presuppositions are stabilized by metaphors that naturalize a particular nature-culture dualism and set of moral beliefs, first about how humans should treat nature, and second, about what type of society nature is telling humans to build. Moving forward, sociologists should pay closer attention to the nature-culture dualism, not only because it is analytically important but because moral imagination is impossible without it.

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    47 mins
  • Nature and Cultural Theory (PhD Qualifying Exam)
    Jul 1 2023

    This is a long and boring answer to the first question on my PhD qualifying exams at Yale University from this past Spring. I used the new ElevenLabs AI to turn the answer into an audiobook quality thing. This was the question:

    Your attempt to develop a new “Sociology of Nature” raises questions—both old and new—about the relationship between society and nature. How was this relationship thought about in classical sociology, and where does the study of this relationship stand today?

     

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    1 hr and 7 mins

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