this post was submitted on 20 Jan 2026
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Please enjoy.
Along with Naomi Klein and Ta-Nehisi Coates works, plus John Ralston Saul's The Unconscious Civilization, Rutger Bregman's Utopia is for Realists and several Massey Lectures, these have shaped my outlook on the world as it is.
Because this came last, for me, it recast this human experiment of ours and the depth of misdirection that is going on now.
Which Massey lectures would you reccomend?
Ill only recommend ones from those I've read. Here are 10. Looking at the list on Wikipedia, I want to read almost all.
I didn't realize this was a Massey Lecture when I read it. A fascinating insight into the business culture of management. Forecasted the runaway hit book Bullshit Jobs
This is the only one recommended that I havent read I do so on the strength of the other book by Thomas King I read: the Inconvenient Indian (which is a game changer, and I should've mentioned in my 1st post).
Vital. A top 3 pick.
This was the first one I read at the time it was released, knowing it as a Massey Lecture and before the lectures were delivered. She wrote it in early 2008. Published in the summer of '08 and the the bottom fell out of the stock market in September. She then toured Canada saying, and I'm paraphrasing here, "Well, shit. I didnt know I was this right."
Wade Davis is a cultural anthropologist. His perspective is fascinating. For everyone who loves Moana he consulted on that film. One of his lectures is about Polynesians expanding across the Pacific.
This, the 50th anniversary, is the first series of lectures that are fictional. Also, the first ones that I attended in person. I'm still waiting for lecture 1 to actually happen.
I love these ones because they're accessible science. Top 3.
I guess, because of the Thomas King revelations above, these are the first lectures delivered by a person of First Nations descent.
Blew my absolute mind. Top 3.
I love this one. The first lecture, Cura's Gift, captured my heart.
Whoa, thanks for the detailed reply, this is awesome! Can't wait to take a look!