Gretchen Miller | Homeground

By: Gretchen Miller | Homeground
  • Summary

  • Dr Gretchen Miller has been making audio documentaries and explorations of the human relationship with the natural world for over 20 years. This is a retrospective, ranging in location from the Tanami Desert to Cooper Creek, from the dreamscapes of climate anxiety and hope, to the intimacy of relationships with trees, and the way birds speak with us. 

    Gretchen works with academics and activists, experts and so-called ‘ordinary’ people, finding grace and beauty in their gentle, custodial care, their living, and their passing. She implies, but never bludgeons, the importance of the choices we make and the actions we take as individuals, communities, and democracies.

    Gretchen continues to work as a podcast consultant towards communicating the most critical issues of our time: our environmental relationships, and climate crisis. Her doctoral research (UNSW) was in the contribution of podcasting to the field of environmental communication, and the essential elements required for custodial care of homegrounds: humility, attunement and courage. 

    Almost all of the work here comes from Gretchen's career at the Australian national broadcaster, ABC RN. Many thanks to ABC RN for permission to share here, and for a joyful career and its opportunities to learn about our extraordinary Earth. 

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Episodes
  • Australian History A park for the People (Centennial Park)
    Jun 7 2022

    Centennial Park, Sydney, is 220 hectares of rolling grasslands, paperbark forests and of course the Grand Drive, which encircles the park. But how many know that Grand Drive was intended to showcase the virtues of the rich for the lower classes to observe and emulate? This history of one of Sydney's most significant recreation areas explores the moral and physical drivers for its development. Built to memorialise the centenary of colonisation, it was intended to uplift the common man with its sweeping vistas and educative plantings. But aside from its ideological purpose, in its 120 years of existence it has also seen its fair share of community battles, plans for Olympics sites, and downright filching – of land, and flora. Guests: Dr Catherine Evans, senior lecturer in Landscape Architecture, Faculty of the Build Environment at UNSW, Dr Paul Ashton Associate professor of Public History at the University of Technology, Sydney, Dr Neil Runcie, Former Professor of Economics at UNSW, Keith Jordan, Former local and secretary of the Save the Parks Campaign,Jean Jordan, Former local resident whose family association with Centennial Park dates back to Federation in 1901, Dr Ian HoskinsNorth Sydney Council Historian.

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    52 mins
  • Five miles in Tansy's shoes
    Jun 7 2022

    You never know what’s behind a closed door. What story you’ll find. And in this podcast, the story of an unusual life. Raised a Seventh Day Adventist Tansy Mayhew had to fight against religious upbringing to explore her passion and become a singer. The family home was full of love, but also violence - Tansy's mother had a hair trigger temper and plenty to get cross about, with a disabled son, three daughters, and a peripatetic life. Despite the restrictions of a religion strictly followed by her parents, Tansy moved away from home and upbringing to pursue a life of passion and art. And at the age of 30, with no formal musical education she became the singer she'd always dreamed of being.  And then - an unexpected surprise. Tansy's life took a right hand turn when she became a single mother of Chanté who was both profoundly disabled and a vibrant spirit. This is their story.

    In memory of Chanté Wambu.

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    28 mins
  • The Ariadne Project
    Jun 7 2022

    When a long term relationship disintegrates, the former partners lose not just a lifelong friend, a home, or the kids. The sense of loss can erode your sense of identity and make your shared history too hard to bear. Grief packs a powerful punch. This program is the outcome of the Ariadne project—where you, the listener, contributed your short stories and anecdotes about divorce and separation. Heart rending and very moving, but also subtly nuanced and optimistic writing came in from all over the country. Through your fragments and memories—and using the 4,000-year-old mythic relationship of the Greek princess Ariadne and her lover Theseus as our guide—we explores the cycle of love and heartbreak human beings endure...and find it was ever thus.
    But also, it is possible to recover and return to the land of the living. Credits: Harmless - Cheryl Howard; The Weaver -Charles D’anastasi; To the Farthest Shores of Silence and Antigen - Doug Baird; Night after Night - Kali; The Dog -Masonik; Dirge - Abigail Lewis; No Sunny Greek Isle for Us - Teadear; Liberation - Sue Gillet; Ordovician Option - Keryn Kefous. Written and composed by Gretchen Miller. Guests Judith Maitland, Senior Honorary Research Fellow, Classics and Ancient History, University of Western Australia, Gaye Stockell Psychologist, Frances Quirk Associate Professor, School of Medicine and Dentistry and Department of Psychology, James Cook University, Matthew Bambling Senior lecturer, School of Medicine, University of Queensland, Marguerite Johnson Senior Lecturer (Classics), School of Humanities and Social Sciences, The University of Newcastle. Producer Gretchen Miller Sound Engineer Russell Stapleton.

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    52 mins

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