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Right Story, Wrong Story: How to Have Fearless Conversations Hell

Right Story, Wrong Story: How to Have Fearless Conversations Hell in Bloomington, MN
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Continuing the work of the award-winning
Sand Talk
, Tyson Yunkaporta casts an Indigenous lens on contemporary society, challenging us to face conflict and embrace conversation to find our way onto the right track.
With
Right Story, Wrong Story,
Apalech Clan member Tyson Yunkaporta, from far north Queensland, tackles the divisions that prevent us from talking to one another. Yunkaporta invites us to confront life’s biggest questions and arms us with the tools we need to really listen, and to open our minds to change based upon our connections with others. He makes this point through discussions with a diverse range of people across social and political divides including:
liberal economists
memorization experts
Frisian ecologists
and Elders who are wood carvers, mathematicians, and storytellers.
Building upon the Indigenous tradition of “yarning” to weave our individual narratives into the great narrative that includes us all across any and all differences, Yunkaporta argues that story is at the heart of everything. But what is right or wrong story?
Sand Talk
, Tyson Yunkaporta casts an Indigenous lens on contemporary society, challenging us to face conflict and embrace conversation to find our way onto the right track.
With
Right Story, Wrong Story,
Apalech Clan member Tyson Yunkaporta, from far north Queensland, tackles the divisions that prevent us from talking to one another. Yunkaporta invites us to confront life’s biggest questions and arms us with the tools we need to really listen, and to open our minds to change based upon our connections with others. He makes this point through discussions with a diverse range of people across social and political divides including:
liberal economists
memorization experts
Frisian ecologists
and Elders who are wood carvers, mathematicians, and storytellers.
Building upon the Indigenous tradition of “yarning” to weave our individual narratives into the great narrative that includes us all across any and all differences, Yunkaporta argues that story is at the heart of everything. But what is right or wrong story?