A Point Of View

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 129:53:56
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Sinopsis

A weekly reflection on a topical issue

Episodios

  • Talking about Integration

    08/10/2021 Duración: 09min

    David Goodhart discusses why integration is a permanent dilemma for multi-ethnic societies. And he wonders whether, "if there is no solution to the issues that it throws up, then not talking about it much might be a rational strategy".Or, he asks, is that too complacent?Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • In Praise of Mathematics

    01/10/2021 Duración: 10min

    "Tomorrow's world," writes Zia Haider Rahman, "will be shaped still more by finance, tech, and the minds of the mathematically disposed." He argues that we ignore maths at our peril. Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • Suffer the Children

    24/09/2021 Duración: 09min

    In the aftermath of the recent report on religious groups in the UK carried out by the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, Rebecca Stott ponders the tension between defending the right to religious freedom and defending the rights of the child. "Maybe it is time," she writes, "to admit that closed, highly-controlling environments , that refuse or escape scrutiny in the name of religious toleration... might not be safe places to entrust the hearts, minds and bodies of children." Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • Little Amal

    17/09/2021 Duración: 09min

    As thousands of Afghan refugees look to make their home in the UK, Michael Morpurgo tells the story of one child refugee, Little Amal. "Surely," he argues, "just as we now fully acknowledge our global responsibility to restore the world about us, the world we ourselves have damaged, so we must play our part as one of the richest nations on earth, to welcome in as many refugees as we can, to give them safe haven with us, to treat them right, as we know we should." Producer: Adele Armstrong Recorded by James Vickery of Radio Devon

  • The Limits of Reason

    10/09/2021 Duración: 09min

    John Gray on how former British Prime Minister, Arthur Balfour, identified a weakness in the idea that science and faith are opposites."Beyond our narrow corner of things, there may be limitless possibilities, or else primordial chaos," he writes. "Our belief in the uniformity of nature is not a result but a presupposition of science - in other words, an act of faith."Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • The Secret Life of Food

    03/09/2021 Duración: 09min

    Sara Wheeler looks at the emotional power of food. "It's regrettable", she writes, "that the link between food and happiness has been broken by the epidemic of obesity that bedevils the developed world."Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • The Creep of the On-Screen Narrative

    27/08/2021 Duración: 09min

    'I don't want to find an eight-part drama more interesting than my life', writes Zoe Strimpel.Zoe reflects on the power of TV as a coping mechanism at the height of the COVID pandemic.But she argues that the creep of the on-screen narrative must now be slowed down in order for us to fully re-engage with our lives.Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • The Rhetoric of the Climate Crisis

    20/08/2021 Duración: 09min

    Rebecca Stott responds to the latest report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. And she reflects on how our ancestors dealt with dramatic weather events - and the gods they believed were responsible. "Our ancestors would have sacrificed everything they owned to appease those gods.....they would have prayed together, sacrificed together"."But what," she wonders, "will we in the west sacrifice to save our species? Our cars? Our meat-eating? Our air-conditioning? Our foreign holidays?" Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • A Study in Improbability

    13/08/2021 Duración: 10min

    Adam Gopnik reflects on the ever-increasing accessibility of the past.He ponders what effect it has when "everything in the world that we can ever remember, everything that has accidentally haunted our imaginations for even a moment" is available online.Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • Rapping with a W

    06/08/2021 Duración: 09min

    Howard Jacobson turns his thoughts to the unlikely subject of present wrapping.He delves into "Expectation Disconfirmation Theory" which, he claims, "will explain why you are less happy than you ever thought you'd be with your new trainers, and more happy than you ever expected you'd be listening to this programme!"Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • In the Dingle Peninsula

    30/07/2021 Duración: 09min

    'In the dog days of the pandemic,' writes John Connell, 'I decided the place to recharge my spirit was the mountains and oceans of Ireland's west coast.'John sets off in the footsteps of the famous Irish monk and journeyman, St Brendan, in an attempt to recover a sense of 'wonder'.Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • Trolls Running Riot

    23/07/2021 Duración: 09min

    Bernardine Evaristo argues that the racist abuse levelled at England players after the final of the Euros has troubling ramifications. She says it's the kind of "vile, in-yer-face bile many of us thought we'd left behind decades ago."The essay contains very strong racist language. Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • Verrucas Optional

    16/07/2021 Duración: 09min

    'I object to the demotion of the noble art of indoor swimming,' writes Sara Wheeler, 'in the current frenzy to leap into the nearest river.'Sara explains why she has little time for the new fad of wild swimming and sings the praises of those gorgeous pools that sprang up around the UK from the nineteenth century. Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • Red Tape

    09/07/2021 Duración: 09min

    Tom Shakespeare argues that red tape should be regarded as a force for good. From Charles Dickens' famous mention of red tape until today, making fun of red tape has been virtually a national pastime. But Tom cautions that as Britain prepares to set aside rules and regulations surrounding COVID, we shouldn't act too hastily.Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • The Boring Twenties

    02/07/2021 Duración: 09min

    Niall Ferguson argues that a post-pandemic 'Roaring Twenties' is far from certain. 'There are good reasons to doubt that the 2020s will be roaring in any sense at all, good or bad', he writes. 'Rather the remainder of the decade may prove distinctly boring.' Reflecting on his own teenage boredom, he believes - for young people - a boring decade would be the biggest disappointment of all. Producer: Adele Armstrong(Image: Niall Ferguson. Credit: Dewald Aukema)

  • The Culture War

    25/06/2021 Duración: 09min

    Zoe Strimpel argues that the culture war is no fake or proxy war - but rather ideas about what is acceptable to know, to teach and to think.Thirty years after the US sociologist James Davison Hunter wrote his book 'Culture Wars: The Struggle to Define America', Zoe looks at how those ideas are playing out around the world today. 'There is a sense of menace about,' she writes, 'of pent-up, complicated grievance. I worry that the culture war could tip into something far more deadly.' Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • Anti-Zionism and the Death of Tragedy

    18/06/2021 Duración: 10min

    "To locate Zionism's origins," argues Howard Jacobson, "we must leave historical for spiritual time." Howard ponders whether a hint of the tragic world view would change perceptions today in the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians. Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • The Arts in Our Hearts

    11/06/2021 Duración: 09min

    Bernardine Evaristo argues that, as we move out of lockdown and rebuild our creative infrastructure, we must cherish the country's arts culture.She criticises disinvestment in the arts and the notion that school children should be, at every stage of their education, steered towards science and maths subjects. 'Creativity infuses every aspect of society and how we function as human beings,' she writes. 'Without creativity everything stagnates, including advances in STEM subjects.'Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • The Past is Never Dead

    04/06/2021 Duración: 09min

    Sara Wheeler rereads her youthful diaries and ponders lessons learned. 'Discarding perished rubber bands that once sheaved the slim volumes,' Sara writes, 'I read the story of my own life.'She wonders if accepting and understanding the past can help us escape 'the three rs of lived experience - regret, remorse and recrimination.' Producer: Adele Armstrong

  • Eavesdropping

    28/05/2021 Duración: 09min

    'I have to concede: I am a fervent eavesdropper', writes Will Self.He ponders eavesdropping etiquette, the hard and fast rules of the game, and whether - in our straitened times - there can be any future for the eavesdropper.Producer: Adele Armstrong

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