Sinopsis
A weekly reflection on a topical issue
Episodios
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Bankers in America
17/02/2012 Duración: 10minDavid Cannadine reflects on current and historic attitudes towards bankers in America where opinion does not divide neatly along party lines. He sees today's criticism as mild by comparison with the attitude of Franklin D. Roosevelt who unleashed "a sustained and ferocious attack " during the era of the New Deal. Producer: Sheila Cook.
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Anniversary Cornucopia
10/02/2012 Duración: 09minAwareness of the Queen's Diamond Jubilee and the two hundredth anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens may be widespread but fewer may know 2012 marks the two hundredth anniversary of the death of the only British prime minister to be assassinated. Producer: Sheila Cook.
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Email Etiquette
03/02/2012 Duración: 09minLisa Jardine reflects on the perils of sending over-hasty emails compared with the time allowed for reflection by old fashioned letter writing. Producer: Sheila Cook.
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The Thatcher Story
27/01/2012 Duración: 09minThe historian Lisa Jardine reflects on the week's events. Producer: Sheila Cook.
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Volume Control
19/01/2012 Duración: 09minLisa Jardine reflects on her aversion to today's new sources of noise and traces the history of some attempts at noise abatement. Producer: Sheila Cook.
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The Art of Gardening
13/01/2012 Duración: 10minThe historian Lisa Jardine recalls the seventeenth century Lord Chancellor, and keen gardener, Sir Francis Bacon as she reflects on the art of gardening, as both pure human pleasure and a means of self advancement. "Perhaps the innocence and sustaining consolation of gardens is not quite such a simple matter after all. The shadow of political self-interest falls across the sweet-smelling flowerbeds and shady bowers too." Producer: Sheila Cook.
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Information Overload
06/01/2012 Duración: 10minThe historian Lisa Jardine reflects that information overload is not a new problem. "By the seventeenth-century there was widespread anxiety that the sheer volume of available knowledge was getting out of hand." There were also fears that wars and unrest could obliterate knowledge through the destruction of archives. Nowadays, losing knowledge completely is harder thanks to the internet, but the need to sift it is as great as ever. Producer: Sheila Cook.
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Glamour in Austerity
30/12/2011 Duración: 10minLisa Jardine remembers 2011 for the spectacle of the Royal Wedding, reflecting on the historic power of regal glamour in times of austerity. Queen Elizabeth I "used ostentation and opulence in her dress as a political tool to increase national confidence in the solvency of her regime." Producer: Sheila Cook.
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The Memory Business
29/12/2011 Duración: 14minSimon Schama reflects on how the world - ten years on - remembered the events of 9/11. And he ponders why it's vital to remember. "Ten years is an aeon in tweet-time", he writes, but 9/11 "bleeds - in every sense - into today's front pages".Producer: Adele Armstrong.
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Media Malpractice
28/12/2011 Duración: 14minWill Self reflects on the new landscape for the press Producer: Sheila Cook.
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The Meaning of Debt
27/12/2011 Duración: 13minSarah Dunant looks at different aspects of debt, including the debt owed to those who have been a force for change in Arab countries. Producer: Sheila Cook.
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The End, yet again?
26/12/2011 Duración: 13minThe author and philosopher John Gray on the merits of living for the present. "We tend to look forward to a future state of fulfilment in which all turmoil has ceased", Gray writes. But, he says, "when we look to the future to give meaning to our lives, we lose the meaning we can make for ourselves here and now". He argues that we should give up our obsession with endings and urges us not to be wary of change. "Humans are sturdy creatures, built to withstand disruption". "Conflict never ceases", he says, "but neither do human resourcefulness, adaptability and courage". On Europe, he writes, "wherever Europe's elites turn for support, the pillars begin to crumble and shake. Eventually every utopian project comes to grief - and while it started as a benign creation, the European project has long since acquired an unmistakably utopian quality. The efforts that are being made to renew the project are only accelerating its demise"."Renewing our lives in the face of recurring evils", he concludes, "is the task...th
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Carols at Christmas
23/12/2011 Duración: 09minLisa Jardine reflects on the power of music to move, especially at Christmas, when the singing of carols unites singers and listeners alike, in an outpouring of community spirit. She also celebrates each advance in technology which has made music available to all, not just an elite, from the fifteenth century mass production of carol books to the screening in cinemas worldwide of opera live from the Met in New York. Producer: Sheila Cook.
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Climate Change Belief
16/12/2011 Duración: 10minLisa Jardine thinks selective hearing skews the debate over climate change and urges climate scientists to fully engage in a conversation with their sceptical critics. "Graphs and pie charts have evidently failed to convince. Perhaps a more discursive approach which focuses on observable change backed up by scientific evidence may be more persuasive." Producer: Sheila Cook.
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Beware the Experts
09/12/2011 Duración: 10minThe historian Lisa Jardine recalls CP Snow for lessons on the dangers of leaving political decisions to technocrats and experts and calls for better informed debate by politicians and public alike in the fields of science and economics.Producer: Sheila Cook.
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Lisa Jardine: Finding Family History
02/12/2011 Duración: 09minThe historian Lisa Jardine welcomes recent moves to promote the teaching of history in schools and finds herself converted to the value of family history after the discovery of a tape recording shed light on a puzzling family photograph which was taken in 1906. Producer: Sheila Cook.
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The Oxbridge Interview
25/11/2011 Duración: 09minMary Beard reflects on the purpose of the much-maligned "Oxbridge interview" and defends the "Would you rather be an apple or a banana" school of questioning.... Producer: Adele Armstrong.
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Reflections on Monetary Union
18/11/2011 Duración: 09minWith the euro in turmoil, Mary Beard reflects on the very first monetary union, two and a half thousand years ago. And she contemplates the detail of the modern euro coins. "Take a closer look at those heads-and-tails" she writes, "and you'll find some rather disconcerting angles on European history and politics". She decides that it is the Greek Euro-coinage that offers the most food for thought. The bull on the back of the 2 euro coin is, in fact, part of a depiction of a rape. Zeus, the king of the gods turned himself into a bull and snatched Princess Europa. Mary says she understands why the Greeks wanted this scene on their coins. It suggests that "without Greece there would have been no Europe - that Greece had invented the continent". But she's never quite worked out "how the Greek people so easily came to terms with the idea of having a picture of rape jingling around amongst the small change in their pockets". Then she turns her sights to the 1 euro coin, with its beady-eyed owl, an exact copy of a f
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On Age and Beauty
11/11/2011 Duración: 09minMary Beard takes a peek at Miss World 2011 and ponders why - unlike her days as a radical feminist teenager -the whole occasion doesn't fill her with fury. "It all felt" - she writes - "like a scantily-clad, tabloid version of University Challenge....but with a kind of high-minded worthiness". Long gone the old beauty contest ambitions of travelling and starting a family. "These contestants talked of becoming international lawyers, museum curators, architects, diplomats". So does this lack outrage mean she has she sold out on feminism? "That's not how it seems to me" she writes. "At 56 I count myself as strong a feminist as I was at 26". Just a bit more laid back. "The less I see my own body as a positive asset" she says - joking about her greying hair and her thickening toe nails - "the less I have wanted to interfere with what other women choose to do with theirs". "Times do change and some battles honestly do get won" she concludes. "I don't any longer feel that Miss Venezuela is much of an enemy". Produce
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Mary Beard: On Tyrants
04/11/2011 Duración: 09minFrom the ingeniously ghastly ways they killed their opponents to their weird forms of dress, Mary Beard reflects on the uncanny similarities between Colonel Gaddafi and the tyrants of ancient Rome. She argues that the similarities were present in life - and in death. "On 11 March 222 AD," she writes, "a posse of rebel soldiers tracked down the Roman emperor Elagabalus to his hiding place. The tyrant was holed up in a latrine, desperately hoping to keep clear of the liberators, who were out for his blood". She continues: "The story goes that the rebels rooted him out, killed him, triumphantly dragged his body through the streets of Rome and then threw his mutilated remains into a drain." Mary suggests modern and ancient tyrant are portrayed as sharing a penchant for eccentric accommodation, like Gaddafi's tent and Nero's infamous "Golden House". And they seem to enjoy dubious hobbies - such as Emperor Domitian's obsession with stabbing flies and Gaddafi's obsessive collection of pictures of Condoleeza Rice, wh