Live with Bruce Parry
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In this live recording, explorer, broadcaster and author Bruce Parry challenges one of the most enduring ideas in exploration: that its purpose is to discover what’s ‘out there’. Instead, he argues, the real frontiers of exploration lie in rediscovering what we as a species have forgotten about ourselves.
Best known for the multiple BBC series that documented his time living with Indigenous communities around the world, Bruce reflects on his personal journey beyond the screen as his motivations evolved from ego-driven adventure to a deeper responsibility to listen, learn, and bring insights home. He discusses the radically different ways of being human that he experienced first-hand: societies built on connection, equality, and an intimate relationship with the natural world. These insights, he argues, are not romantic relics but working models of how humans might once again live sustainably and meaningfully.
At a time of ecological crisis and social fragmentation, Bruce makes a compelling and heartfelt case that the priorities for today’s explorers lie as much in personal and social transformation as in the gathering of scientific data. In incorporating these goals into our explorations and our daily lives, he says, we might more effectively challenge and remould our assumptions about progress, power, and what it means to live well.
Recorded live on stage in the Society’s Ondaatje Theatre with an in-person audience, this is a conversation about humility, responsibility, and the urgent need to reimagine exploration as a force for cultural and planetary repair.