Matthew Sweet discusses the genealogy of blondeness Read more
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Being Blonde
Matthew Sweet discusses the genealogy of blondeness
New Thinking: Work and protest
From Luddite protests in 1811 in textile mills to school strikes in 1911
Victorian colour, jewellery and metalwork
Nandini Das visits Colour Revolution at the Ashmolean in Oxford and talks to a jeweller
Humours and The Body
From mitochondrial medicine to 17th century cancer treatments, via Bach's Cantatas
Valis and Philip K Dick
A weirdly autobiographical science fiction novel from 1981 inspired by hallucinations.
Sankofa and Afrofuturism
Curator Ekow Eshun, academic Sarah Jilani, sculptor Zak Ové with Shahihda Bari
Sleep
John Gallagher gets sleeping tips from research pioneers and early modern history
Eliza Flower and non-conformist thinking
Matthew Sweet hears about research into the singer & friend of JS Mill feat. live songs!
Robert Aickman
For Halloween, Matthew Sweet & guests discuss supernatural fiction, bad teeth & canals
African identity via China and photography
Teju Cole, Noo Saro-Wiwa and Tate curator Osei Bonsu talk to Laurence Scott.
New Thinking: Writing exile and overcoming statelessness
The lives of Bengalis in Pakistan/a novel about a Lebanese boy wanting to be an astronaut
New Thinking: Food
Lisa Mullen hears about new research into eating habits and ideas about hospitality
New Thinking: Playhouses and opera-going
What spectacles did Elizabethan playhouses stage other than plays? Is opera really posh?
The Imperial War Museum Remembrance discussion 2023
As the IWM unveils its new art galleries, Anne McElvoy & guests discuss photographing war
New Thinking: How and why we talk
John Gallagher hears about tongue shapes, accent prejudice and the importance of gossip
New Thinking: The Box Office Bears project
From digging for bones to the connection between bear baiting and Elizabethan theatre
Shakespeare as inspiration
From Bollywood films and Pre-Raphaelite art to productions of Shakespeare in places at war
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
New Thinking: Rediscovering women making film and sculpture
Kathleen Collins’ film scripts and women sculptors working in wax
Sam Selvon and The Lonely Londoners
Selvon's evocative 1956 novel discussed at the British Library by Shahidha Bari & guests.
Post-War Germany
Forging the modern German nation from the moral and material ruins of WW2
AS Byatt and The Children's Book
AS Byatt discussed her writing life with Matthew Sweet as she published a novel in 2009
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
Bureaucracies of the soul satirised in novels. Matthew Sweet's guests include Lea Ypi.
New Thinking: Disability in Music and Theatre
Dr Louise Creechan and guests discuss adaptive music technology & musical theatre roles
Humboldt, soil, gardens and Frank Walter
For World Soil Day, a celebration of art, research and ideas to revive the earth
Narnia and CS Lewis
Exploring the literary and theological terrain of C.S. Lewis's Narnia
Margaret Cavendish
Nandini Das and guests discuss the Duchess of Newcastle - philosopher, poet and scientist
Harry Belafonte
The long career of the American singer, film star & activist with Matthew Sweet & guests