Chris Harding reads from Yu Miri's new novel, The End of August. Read more
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Korea and Japan
Chris Harding reads from Yu Miri's new novel, The End of August.
African identity via China and photography
Teju Cole, Noo Saro-Wiwa and Tate curator Osei Bonsu talk to Laurence Scott.
The Imperial War Museum Remembrance discussion 2023
As the IWM unveils its new art galleries, Anne McElvoy & guests discuss photographing war
Shakespeare as inspiration
From Bollywood films and Pre-Raphaelite art to productions of Shakespeare in places at war
How and why we talk
John Gallagher hears about Gaelic consonants, tongue shapes and accent prejudice
Food
Lisa Mullen hears about new research into eating habits and ideas about hospitality.
Women, art and activism
Naomi Paxton and guests on exhibitions at Tate Britain, the Barbican and Modern Art Oxford
Ursula Le Guin and The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas
Naomi Alderman, Esmie Jikiemi-Pearson and others discuss the politics of this 1973 fable.
Sam Selvon and The Lonely Londoners
Selvon's evocative 1956 novel discussed at the British Library by Shahidha Bari & guests.
Postwar Germany
Forging the modern German nation from the moral and material ruins of World War II.
Lorca
As the National Theatre stages The House of Bernarda Alba, Rana Mitter discusses Lorca
Libraries
From Alexandria to mid-Wales, Laurence Scott and guests look at library history.
Kadare, Gospodinov, Kafka and Dickens
Lea Ypi and Roger Luckhurst join Matthew Sweet to look at novels, dreams and bureaucracy.
Humboldt, soil, gardens and Frank Walter
Jago Cooper, Barbara Paca, Jim Scown and Camilla Allen talk trees, soil, art and advocacy.
Narnia and CS Lewis
Exploring the literary and theological terrain of C.S. Lewis's Narnia
JG Ballard's Crash
Iain Sinclair, Mark Blacklock, Muriel Zagha and Jo Stanley join Matthew Sweet.
The Life of Objects
Timothy Morton, Steve Connor, Caroline Edwards and Rachele Dini talk to Lisa Mullen.
Margaret Cavendish
Nandini Das and guests discuss the Duchess of Newcastle - philosopher, poet and scientist.
Harry Belafonte's career
The long career of the American singer, film star & activist with Matthew Sweet & guests.
Prize Winners 2023
Nandini Das, Tania Branigan, Halik Kochanski, Ed Yong, John Vallaint talk to Rana Mitter
Greek myth, goddesses and art
From classic myths rewritten by Natalie Haynes to the art of John Craxton in Crete.
Dickens, Disney and copyright
Matthew Sweet looks at copyright rules for Mickey Mouse and Dickens in C19th America.
Travel, pleasure and peril
From preventing strangulation on the railways to guide maps and the art of travel posters.
Game playing
Shahidha Bari finds out how to win at rock, paper, scissors and to make a Windrush game.
Essay writing
From Montaigne to modern Scottish writing - Rana Mitter discusses what makes a good essay.
Dust, dirt and domesticity
From mould to desertification Naomi Paxton and guests on the impact of dirt,heat and damp
Shakespeare's Women
The women who crop up in Shakespeare's life, his plays and who helped conserve his legacy.
What is normal?
Sarah Chaney, Louise Creechan and Robert Chapman discuss neurodiversity with Matthew Sweet
Heidegger and Anti-Semitism
Matthew Sweet discusses the influential German philosopher's relationship with Nazism.
The Kyoto School
Chris Harding investigates the flourishing of Japanese philosophy in the 1930s and beyond.
Holocaust history
Ahead of Holocaust Memorial Day (Jan 27) Anne McElvoy hears testimony and new research.