Join My Climate Story project, the Yale Program on Climate Communication, the Penn Center for Science, Sustainability, & the Media, and the High Meadows Environmental Institute for a free, live, online, two-hour storytellers’ summit. Conceived by Professor Bethany Wiggin and moderated by UPenn scientist Michael Mann, this event and its companion documentation offer a high-profile platform to present climate storytelling work and to learn and connect with others working in this important space.
A decade ago, the term “climate storytelling” was new. Today, it’s proliferating, used by practitioners and theorists to describe stories that connect global climate change with local people and places. Climate stories can disrupt stories of business as usual. They can grapple with history and inspire hope. They can imagine flourishing futures, even as they also deal in dystopian presents. They can present agentic pathways, sharing examples of individuals and communities working for and realizing the climate they want. Good climate storytellers work with climate science, and they also work across sectors: in the media and the arts and humanities, in Hollywood and elementary school classrooms, in the climate movement and in climate science.
As climate storytelling gains steam—fueled by the urgent need to advance climate solutions that cut carbon and methane pollution and protect communities from extreme weather—we’ll gather climate storytellers across sectors to learn from one another and spark generative, collaborative conversations.
The Call for Submissions is now closed.
Registration
Please register in advance via this Zoom link.
It is our hope that this convening and its documentation will offer valuable support for climate storytellers of all ages and levels of experience by showcasing the value of climate storytelling and offering a resource hub for present and future climate storytellers and storytelling projects, and for connections across sectors.
Time Zones
New York: 4–6PM
Los Angeles: 1–3PM
Berlin: 10PM–12AM
Mumbai: 2:30–4:30AM (April 11)
Australia: 8–10AM (April 11)
A decade ago, the term “climate storytelling” was new. Today, it’s proliferating, used by practitioners and theorists to describe stories that connect global climate change with local people and places. Climate stories can disrupt stories of business as usual. They can grapple with history and inspire hope. They can imagine flourishing futures, even as they also deal in dystopian presents. They can present agentic pathways, sharing examples of individuals and communities working for and realizing the climate they want. Good climate storytellers work with climate science, and they also work across sectors: in the media and the arts and humanities, in Hollywood and elementary school classrooms, in the climate movement and in climate science.
As climate storytelling gains steam—fueled by the urgent need to advance climate solutions that cut carbon and methane pollution and protect communities from extreme weather—we’ll gather climate storytellers across sectors to learn from one another and spark generative, collaborative conversations.
The Call for Submissions is now closed.
Registration
Please register in advance via this Zoom link.
It is our hope that this convening and its documentation will offer valuable support for climate storytellers of all ages and levels of experience by showcasing the value of climate storytelling and offering a resource hub for present and future climate storytellers and storytelling projects, and for connections across sectors.
Time Zones
New York: 4–6PM
Los Angeles: 1–3PM
Berlin: 10PM–12AM
Mumbai: 2:30–4:30AM (April 11)
Australia: 8–10AM (April 11)
Speakers
Professor Bethany Wiggin
UPenn Scientist Michael Mann
University programs and activities are open to all eligible participants without regard to identity or other protected characteristics. Sponsorship of an event does not constitute institutional endorsement of external speakers or views presented.