Are lists a good way of organising chaos? Lisa Mullen and guests discuss Read more
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Lists
Are lists a good way of organising chaos? Lisa Mullen and guests discuss
Beasts and animals
Shahidha Bari investigates the human invention of animals.
Landladies
Historical accounts and fictional depictions of the women who ran boarding houses.
Katherine Mansfield and Mavis Gallant
Claire Harman, Kirsty Gunn, Laurence Scott and Shahidha Bari discuss short story writing.
Amílcar Cabral
Rana Mitter and guests discuss the pan-Africanist poet and anti-colonial leader.
Wilkie Collins and disability
How the Victorian author’s own pain and drug dependency fed into his sensational novels.
Phillis Wheatley
Christienna Fryar explores the life and writing of the enslaved American poet (1753-1784).
Anna Kavan
Matthew Sweet looks at the writer of a dystopian psychodrama, Ice, who died in 1968.
Language Loss and Revival
John Gallagher is joined by Gwenno, who writes and sings in Cornish, and others.
The Wife of Bath
Shahidha Bari is joined by Professor Marion Turner, poet Patience Agbabi and Hetta Howes.
Higher education for women and working-class students
Anne McElvoy hosts a conversation about higher education and the history of its expansion.
Audrey Hepburn
Matthew Sweet marks the 30th anniversary of the death of this icon of film and fashion.
Aztecs and Otherness
Caroline Dodds Pennock discusses how Aztecs, Inuit, Mayans and others discovered Europe.
William Stukeley
The English antiquarian (1687-1765) who may be the father of modern archaeology.
Holocaust Memorial Day 2023
Matthew Sweet looks at the experiences of Portuguese Jewish and Roma communities.
The English Civil War
The resonances of C17 history now, discussed by Jonathan Healey, Anna Keay, Clare Jackson.
Crossroads and TV soaps
Russell T Davies and Paula Milne on the power of soap operas.
Gwendolyn Brooks
Shahidha Bari looks at the writing of a Pulitzer Prize-winning American poet (1917-2000).
Lady Macbeth
From Kurosawa and Shostakovich to Zinnie Harris. New takes on the Scottish play.
Donkeys
From Aesop and the bible to the film EO which looks at a donkey born in a Polish circus.
Stories of Love
Romeo and Juliet reworked, Proust and Rita Mae Brown's coming-of-age tale Rubyfruit Jungle
People's History
The people's history of banners, a dress diary, Sheffield sculptures and a new musical.
Idrissa Ouédraogo
Matthew Sweet and guests explore the work of Burkinabé film-maker Idrissa Ouédraogo.
Phaedra, Cretan palaces and the minotaur
Knossos, birthplace of myths and tragedies, is explored by Rana Mitter and Natalie Haynes.
Ghosts of Caribbean history
New writing by Colin Grant and Kevin Jared Hosein; art by Michael Elliott and Mary Evans.
Climate change and empire building
The long history of climate change and empire: historians Nandini Das and Peter Frankopan
Tin cans, cutlery and sewing
New research into the history of stainless steel cutlery, tinned food and sewing machines.
Sesame Street and Soviet culture
Anne McElvoy on Russian punk protest and a version of US TV's Big Bird, Bert and Ernie.
Concrete poetry
Matthew Sweet and guests on the career of poet and monk Dom Sylvester Houédard (1924-92).
Anarchism and David Graeber
Matthew Sweet and guests look at the ideas of the American anthropologist (1961-2020)
Making your voice heard
Dina Nayeri, Kirsty Sedgman, Michelle Assay and Alberta Whittle join Shahidha Bari.