Are court cases an effective way of meeting climate aims? Read more
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Green Thinking: Law
Are court cases an effective way of meeting climate aims?
Oceans, art and pacific poetry
From coral reef sculptures to creation sagas of Australia and attitudes to land and sea.
Caesar, Hogarth and images of power
Rana Mitter talks to Professor Mary Beard, artist Ali Cherri and looks at Hogarth's art.
Green Thinking: Energy
What use can we find for old power stations?
Green Thinking: Activism and Young People
Glasgow and Birmingham projects to help young people express their experiences.
God's Body
Matthew Sweet is joined by Francesca Stavrakopoulou, Mark Vernon and Hetta Howes
Green Thinking: Future of Home
Around 60% of UK waste comes from the construction sector. How can we tackle this?
The Imperial War Museum Remembrance Discussion 2021
How do we define a war? Anne McElvoy and guests look at how language changes attitudes.
Green Thinking: Climate and Refugees
Is climate change really causing people to flee their homes?
Green Thinking: Climate Justice
What we learn from involving communities experiencing the sharp end of climate change.
New Thinking: Being Human 2021
Research into covid comics, codes in Dickens, projecting books onto hospital ceilings.
Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex
One of the key French Existentialists of the 1950s, how does de Beauvoir read today?
Marvin Gaye's What's Going On
Ahead of a performance at the London Jazz Festival, what history underpins the album?
Faking It and Trompe-l'oeil
From fake flowers carved by Grinling Gibbons to modern craft and internet images.
New Thinking: Memorials and Commemoration
From World War One soldiers in Belfast to the LGBTQ+ monument in Amsterdam.
Romanian history and literature
Novelists Mircea Cărtărescu, Georgina Harding & Philippe Sands join Anne McElvoy
Christopher Logue's War Music
Shahidha Bari and guests read this version of Homer's Illiad and look at Logue's language
Toys
How toys are shaped by politics and why they have a spooky side.
Dürer, Rhinos and Whales
Writer Philip Hoare, curator Robert Wenley, historian Helen Cowie talk celebrity animals.
Caribbean art
As a Tate Britain show opens, Shahidha Bari looks at Caribbean post war writing and art
The Day of the Triffids
The end of the world as we know it. Matthew Sweet and guests re-read John Wyndham's novel
Ground-breaking history books
Rana Mitter talks to historians making waves with the books they have published.
New Thinking: Research in Film Award Winners 2021
Prize winning films about migration, autism, Colombians, farming and children born of war
The TV Debate
Gore Vidal v William F Buckley Jr, Germaine Greer v Norman Mailer: Have debates changed?
Witchcraft and Margaret Murray
Matthew Sweet and guests look at The Witch Cult in Western Europe (1921) and witches now
Early Buddhism; Sheila Rowbotham
Two Buddhist scholars and the socialist feminist historian join Rana Mitter
Colm Toibin; Dullness as a virtue
Is it a good thing to stand out? Anne McElvoy and guests explore the virtue of being dull
Fungi: An Alien Encounter
Are fungi out to get us or here to help? A look at mushrooms in art, food and psychology.
Jean-Paul Belmondo and the French New Wave
The French film star who burst onto the scene in 1960 in Godard's Breathless
Gloves
From python skin to digital worlds, PPE to vegan materials: how gloves are evolving.
Appeasement
How does Neville Chamberlain's capitulation to Hitler in 1938 affect politics in 2022?