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The Forum with Juliet Schor 

The Forum at Grace Cathedral

Release Date: 04/27/2023

The Forum with The Rt. Rev. Austin Rios show art The Forum with The Rt. Rev. Austin Rios

The Forum at Grace Cathedral

Note: The music stops at 0:50. September 29, 2024 at Grace Cathedral, San Francisco  Join Grace Cathedral Dean Malcolm Clemens Young for an engaging conversation with the Ninth Bishop of California, The Rt. Rev. Austin Keith Rios, who was installed as Bishop in August. As the chief pastor of the diocese, Bishop Rios is entrusted with leading, supervising, and uniting our congregations, ministries, and diocesan institutions. Notably, he is the first Latino bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of California. Discover more about his journey from his birthplace in Texas to the other places he has...

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The Forum with Debie Thomas show art The Forum with Debie Thomas

The Forum at Grace Cathedral

When your faith begins to feel too small, too confining, you could choose to leave it. But what if the faith we inhabit is roomier than we'd thought? What if our collapsing faith is just a closet in a much larger dwelling?  Disillusioned by narrow theologies, church dysfunction, and constricted readings of Scripture, people are leaving Christianity in droves. But Jesus describes the reign of God as a house with many rooms, writes author Debie Thomas, one of the most auspicious voices in religious writing today. In this work of sprawling spiritual and literary imagination, Thomas claims that...

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The Forum with Debie Thomas show art The Forum with Debie Thomas

The Forum at Grace Cathedral

When your faith begins to feel too small, too confining, you could choose to leave it. But what if the faith we inhabit is roomier than we'd thought? What if our collapsing faith is just a closet in a much larger dwelling?  Disillusioned by narrow theologies, church dysfunction, and constricted readings of Scripture, people are leaving Christianity in droves. But Jesus describes the reign of God as a house with many rooms, writes author Debie Thomas, one of the most auspicious voices in religious writing today. In this work of sprawling spiritual and literary imagination, Thomas claims that...

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The Forum with Michael Goldberg on Jukebox show art The Forum with Michael Goldberg on Jukebox

The Forum at Grace Cathedral

In this special summer Forum, meet Addicted To Noise founder and former Rolling Stone senior writer Michael Goldberg and get a firsthand account of the first-ever collection of his photographs in the new book JUKEBOX: 1967-2023 Photographs.

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The Forum with Scott D. Sampson, Ph.D. - June 9, 2024 show art The Forum with Scott D. Sampson, Ph.D. - June 9, 2024

The Forum at Grace Cathedral

In all the many conversations about climate change, sometimes the story of what nature’s value is to us can get a bit lost. We have a lot to learn from the kinds of traditions that see nature as relatives, not resources; as communities, not commodities. We need a narrative that places us back within the natural world as actors in this multi-million-year drama. If we're able to do that — if we can put ourselves into that drama — then we can see that we have a role to play in a thriving future, not just for people, but for the entire biosphere, for all life on Earth. And there's perhaps...

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The Forum with Michele Benedetto Neitz  show art The Forum with Michele Benedetto Neitz

The Forum at Grace Cathedral

The internet of today is a far cry from its early promise of a decentralized, democratic network of innovation, connection, and freedom. In the past decade, it has fallen under the control of a small group of powerful companies. But the dream of an open network for fostering creativity and entrepreneurship doesn’t have to die. And it just might be saved by blockchain networks, which create a radical new way to design fair and freely accessible internet services that put users in charge. There is more to this technology's story than crypto scams!  Michele Benedetto Neitz is a...

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The Forum with Malcolm Harris   show art The Forum with Malcolm Harris 

The Forum at Grace Cathedral

The history of Silicon Valley, from railroads to microchips, is an “extraordinary” story of disruption and destruction, told for the first time in this comprehensive, jaw-dropping narrative (Greg Grandin, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The End of the Myth). Palo Alto’s weather is temperate, its people are educated and enterprising, its corporations are spiritually and materially ambitious and demonstrably world-changing. Palo Alto is also a haunted toxic waste dump built on stolen Indian burial grounds, and an integral part of the capitalist world system.  In , the first...

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The Forum with Sarah Ogilvie   show art The Forum with Sarah Ogilvie 

The Forum at Grace Cathedral

The Oxford English Dictionary is one of mankind’s greatest achievements, and yet, curiously, its creators are almost never considered. Who were the people behind this unprecedented book? As Dr. Sarah Ogilvie reveals, they include three murderers, a collector of pornography, the daughter of Karl Marx, a president of Yale, a radical suffragette, a vicar who was later found dead in the cupboard of his chapel, an inventor of the first American subway, a female anti-slavery activist in Philadelphia . . . and thousands of others.   is a history and celebration of the many far-flung...

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The Forum at Grace Cathedral with Tonya M. Foster  show art The Forum at Grace Cathedral with Tonya M. Foster 

The Forum at Grace Cathedral

Prayer is a convergence of absence and will. A poem is a kind of prayer. — Dr. Tonya M. Foster Dr. Tonya M. Foster is a poet, essayist, editor, and Black feminist scholar. Her writing and research focus on poetry, poetics, ideas of place and emplacement, and on intersections between the visual and the written. She uses all types of words in her poetry: big and small, beautiful, and vulgar. It is a key tactic of her ongoing study of language. Every year we choose a theme to inspire us and to create new ways to grow as a community. Last year was our Year of Poetry. In 2024 we celebrate the...

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The Forum with David Ackerly show art The Forum with David Ackerly

The Forum at Grace Cathedral

History and ecology teach us the inevitability of change. And in this century, the climate is changing faster than ever. Warmer temperatures and record low precipitation in the recent California drought left 100 million trees dead in the mountains, and California cities and agriculture vulnerable. David Ackerly, climate change biologist and professor at UC Berkeley, has been studying how fast plants and animals may need to migrate uphill or northward as the planet warms. These velocities could be as high as five miles per year — exceeding the ability of most species to find new homes and...

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Recently, the United Nations released a report stating that the Earth is likely to cross a critical threshold for global warming within the next ten years, and that we need to make an immediate and drastic shift away from fossil fuels to prevent the planet from overheating dangerously beyond that level. As we prepare for major changes in how we live, what can we learn from emerging conversations about “green consumption” and a “new economy” focusing on visions of resilience and sustainability, in which stronger, more connected communities become the social fabric for an ecologically balanced economy?

Juliet Schor is an economist and sociologist at Boston College. Her research focuses on work, consumption, and climate change. Her most recent book isAfter the Gig: how the sharing economy got hijacked and how to win it back, which won the Porchlight Management and Workplace Culture Book of the Year. Previous books include the national best-sellerThe Overworked American: The Unexpected Decline of Leisure, widely credited for influencing the national debate on work and family; and True Wealth: How and Why Millions of Americans are Creating a Time-Rich, Ecologically Light, Small-Scale, High-Satisfaction Economy. She has served as a consultant to the United Nations, and is a co-founder of the Center for a New American Dream (newdream.org), a national sustainability organization. 

Join Malcolm Clemens Young in honor of Earth Day for a conversation with Schor about the intersection of climate change and the economy, and what it means to be a green consumer. 

You can help us bring the arts to life at Grace with a gift today to The Forum. Gracecathedral.org/give. 

About the Guest 

Juliet Schor is an economist and sociologist at Boston College. Her research focuses on work, consumption, and climate change. She is currently leading a global research team studying companies around the world who are giving employees 4-day, 32-hour schedules with 5 days of pay. Her most recent book isAfter the Gig: how the sharing economy got hijacked and how to win it back, which won the Porchlight Management and Workplace Culture Book of the Year. Previous books include the national best-sellerThe Overworked American: The Unexpected Decline of Leisure, widely credited for influencing the national debate on work and family; and True Wealth: How and Why Millions of Americans are Creating a Time-Rich, Ecologically Light, Small-Scale, High-Satisfaction Economy. She has served as a consultant to the United Nations, and is a co-founder of the Center for a New American Dream (newdream.org), a national sustainability organization where she served on the board for more than 15 years. A graduate of Wesleyan University, Schor received her Ph.D. in economics at the University of Massachusetts. Before joining Boston College, she taught at Harvard University for 17 years, in the Department of Economics and the Committee on Degrees in Women's Studies. 

About the Moderator 

The Very Rev. Dr. Malcolm Clemens Youngis the dean of Grace Cathedral. He is the author ofThe Spiritual Journal of Henry David ThoreauandThe Invisible Hand in Wilderness: Economics, Ecology, and God, and is a regular contributor on religion to the Huffington Post and San Francisco Examiner.    

AboutTheForum 

The Forumis a series of stimulating conversations about faith and ethics in relation to the important issues of our day. We invite inspiring and illustrious people to sit down for a real conversation with the Forum’s host and with you. Our guests range from artists, inventors and philosophers to pop culturists and elected officials, but the point ofThe Forumis singular: civil, sophisticated discourse that engages minds and hearts to think in new ways about the world. Gracecathedral.org/the-forum