Briony Penn is an award-winning writer of creative non-fiction books as well as a contributor to many anthologies and chapter books. She has been a feature writer and columnist for decades with over five hundred articles on environmental issues and natural history in newspapers, magazines, government publications, on-line news sources and peer-reviewed journals. She’s written environmental guides and educational handbooks for teachers in British Columbia.
Show notes
In this episode of It’s Not About Trees, John Lunn talks to Canadian writer, broadcaster, and ecological activist Briony Penn. From her beginnings as a geography scholar to her unforgettable Lady Godiva ride through Vancouver, Briony has always sought creative ways to make people see the world differently.
She shares how storytelling, humour, and myth became her tools for activism, helping her move beyond academia to reach audiences in more human and memorable ways. Briony reflects on her work with Indigenous elders, capturing knowledge that holds both ecological wisdom and cultural continuity, and speaks candidly about the challenges of countering extractive economic systems with principles of reciprocity and deep ecology.
Through it all, she carries a belief in joy as a form of resistance, insisting that activism can be playful, creative, and full of hope — without losing its urgency.
Highlights include:
Briony Penn, ecological activism, storytelling, Indigenous knowledge, Lady Godiva protest, geography, environmental broadcasting, myth and ecology, humour in activism, reciprocity, deep ecology, cultural memory, extractive economy, regenerative culture, art and protest, ecological literacy, Canada, women in environmental leadership
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