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The LRB Podcast brings you weekly conversations from Europe’s leading magazine of culture and ideas. Hosted by Thomas Jones and Malin Hay, with guest episodes from the LRB's US editor Adam Shatz, Meehan Crist, Rosemary Hill and more.
Find the LRB's new Close Readings podcast in on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or search 'LRB Close Readings' wherever you get your podcasts.
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- 491 - Unspeakable Acts
James Pratt and John Smith were the last men hanged in England for the crime of sodomy, reported to the authorities by nosy landlords who later petitioned for clemency. Tom Crewe joins Thomas Jones to explain how exceptional – and unexceptional – the case was, the historical forces that led to the death sentence and the surprising ambivalence many Londoners felt about ‘unnatural crimes’ in the 1830s.
Find out more about Bluets at the Royal Court theatre here: https://royalcourttheatre.com/whats-on/bluets/
Find Tom Crewe’s piece and further reading at the episode page: https://lrb.me/prattsmithpod
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Wed, 01 May 2024 - 47min - 490 - Where does culture come from?
The word ‘culture’ now drags the term ‘wars’ in its wake, but this is too narrow an approach to a concept with a much more capacious history. In the closing LRB Winter Lecture for 2024, Terry Eagleton examines various aspects of that history – culture and power, culture and ethics, culture and critique, culture and ideology – in an attempt to broaden the argument and understand where we are now.
Terry Eagleton delivered this lecture as part of the LRB's Winter Lecture series at St James's Church, Clerkenwell, London on 27 March 2024.
Read Terry Eagleton’s lecture in the LRB: https://lrb.me/eagletonwl
Watch the lecture on YouTube: https://lrb.me/eagletonwlyt
Find out more about Bluetshere: https://royalcourttheatre.com/whats-on/bluets/
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Wed, 24 Apr 2024 - 1h 08min - 489 - Remembering the Future
In her recent LRB Winter Lecture, Hazel V. Carby discussed ways contemporary Indigenous artists are rendering the ordinarily invisible repercussions of ecocide and genocide visible. She joins Adam Shatz to expand on the artists discussed in her lecture, and how they disrupt the ways we’re accustomed to seeing borders, landmasses, and landscapes empty – or emptied – of people.
Find the lecture and further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/carbypod
Watch the lecture on YouTube: lrb.me/carbyyt
Find out more about Bluets at the Royal Court theatre here: https://royalcourttheatre.com/whats-on/bluets/
Listen to the We Society Podcast here: https://acss.org.uk/we-society-podcast/
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Wed, 17 Apr 2024 - 38min - 488 - Leaving Haiti
Since the 2010 earthquake, ordinary life in Haiti has become increasingly untenable: in January this year, armed gangs controlled around 80 per cent of the capital. Pooja Bhatia joins Tom to discuss Haitian immigration to Chile and the US, the self-defeating nature of US immigration policy and the double binds Haitian refugees find themselves in. Should you pay a bribe if it marks you out as a candidate for kidnapping? Can you be deported to a country without an operating airport? And if asylum laws protect people who are being persecuted, what happens when that covers an entire nation?
Find Pooja's Haiti coverage on the episode page: lrb.me/haitipod
Find out more about Bluets at the Royal Court theatre here: https://royalcourttheatre.com/whats-on/bluets/
Listen to the We Society Podcast here: https://acss.org.uk/we-society-podcast/
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Wed, 10 Apr 2024 - 43min - 487 - Gurle Talk
Modern English speakers struggle to find sexual terms that aren’t either obscene or scientific, but that wasn’t always the case. In a recent review of Jenni Nuttall’s Mother Tongue, Mary Wellesley connects our linguistic squeamishness to changing ideas about women and sexuality. She joins Tom to discuss the changing language of women’s anatomy, work and lives.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/gurletalk
Listen to Mary Wellesley and Irina Dumitrescu on medieval humour: lrb.me/millerstale
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Thu, 04 Apr 2024 - 34min - 486 - The Belgrano Diary: Half a Million Sheep Can't Be Wrong
When Argentina invades the Falkland Islands, Margaret Thatcher sends a huge flotilla on an 8000-mile rescue mission – to save a forgotten remnant of the empire, and her premiership. Onboard the nuclear submarine HMS Conqueror, Lieutenant Narendra Sethia starts to keep a diary.
This is an extract from the first episode. To listen to the rest of it, and the full series, find 'The Belgrano Diary' in:
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Archive:
‘Good Morning Britain’/ITV/TV-Am, ‘Newsnight’/BBC/BBC News, ‘Falkands War – The Untold Story’/ITV/Yorkshire Television, ‘Leach, Henry Conyers (Oral history)’/Imperial War Museum, ‘President Regan’s Press Briefing in the Oval Office on April 5, 1982’/White House Television Office, ‘Diary’/James M. Rentschler, TV Publica/Radio y Televisión Argentina S.E, The Falklands War: Recordings from the Archive/BBC Worldwide, Parliamentary Recording Unit
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Thu, 28 Mar 2024 - 31min - 485 - Architecture Repopulated
Rosemary Hill, reviewing Steven Brindle’s Architecture in Britain and Ireland, 1530-1830, celebrates his approach to architecture as a social, collaborative endeavour, where human need (and human greed) stymies starchitectural vision. Rosemary takes Tom on a tour of British and Irish architecture, from the Reformation through industrialisation, featuring big egos, unexpected outcomes and at least one architect she thinks it’s ‘completely fair’ to call a villain.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/brindlepod
Listen to Rosemary on the design of Bath: lrb.me/stonehengepod
And on Salisbury Cathedral: lrb.me/salisburypod
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Wed, 27 Mar 2024 - 48min - 484 - Introducing: The Belgrano Diary
On 2 May 1982, the British submarine HMS Conqueror sank the Argentinian warship, the General Belgrano, killing 323 men. It was the bloodiest event of the Falklands War – and the most controversial.
The account of the sinking given by Thatcher's government was inaccurate in every crucial detail – and the truth would only emerge from the pages of a private diary, written by an officer onboard the submarine.
The Belgrano Diary is a story of war in the South Atlantic, iron leadership, cover-ups and conspiracies, crusading politicians and competing journalists, and an unlikely whistleblower.
A new six-part series from the Documentary Team at the London Review of Books, hosted by Andrew O’Hagan.
Episode One coming 28 March. Find it wherever you're listening to this podcast.
Archive:
‘Good Morning Britain’/ITV/TV-Am
Parliamentary Recording Unit
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Thu, 21 Mar 2024 - 3min - 483 - The Shoah After Gaza
Pankaj Mishra joins Adam Shatz to discuss his recent LRB Winter Lecture, in which he explores Israel’s instrumentalisation of the Holocaust. He expands on his readings of Jean Améry and Primo Levi, the crisis as understood by the Global South and Zionism’s appeal for Hindu nationalists.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/aftergazapod
Watch the lecture on YouTube: lrb.me/mishrayt
Subscribe to Close Readings:
Directly in Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3pJoFPq
In other podcast apps: lrb.me/closereadings
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Wed, 20 Mar 2024 - 57min - 482 - The Acid House Revolution
Between 1988 and 1994, the UK scrambled to make sense of acid house, with its radical new sounds, new drugs and new ways of partying. In a recent piece for the paper, Chal Ravens considers a reappraisal of the origins and political ramifications of the Second Summer of Love. She joins Tom to unpack the social currents channelled through the free party scene and the long history of countercultural ‘collective festivity’ in England.
Read more, and listen ad free, on the LRB website: lrb.me/acidhousepod
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Wed, 13 Mar 2024 - 1h 00min - 481 - On Giving Up
When is giving up not failure, but a way of succeeding at something else? In his new book, which began as a piece for the LRB, the psychoanalyst and critic Adam Phillips explores the ways in which knowing our limitations can be an act of heroism. This episode was recorded at the London Review Bookshop, where Phillips was joined by the biographer and critic Hermione Lee in a conversation about giving up and On Giving Up, his approach to writing and the purpose of psychoanalysis.
Find Phillips’s 2022 piece On Giving Upand further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/ongivingup
Find future events at the Bookshop: lrb.me/eventspod
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Wed, 06 Mar 2024 - 51min - 480 - On the Jewish Novel
When Deborah Friedell and Adam Thirlwell met twenty years ago, they started a discussion about Jewish identity they are still puzzling over today. Revisiting Philip Roth’s The Counterlife (1986), an American take on British antisemitism and the escapist allure of aliyah, Adam and Deborah discuss the nuances of Jewish experience and novel-writing across the Atlantic.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/jewishnovelpod
Watch Judith Butler’s 2011 Winter Lecture: ‘Who owns Kafka?’
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Wed, 28 Feb 2024 - 55min - 479 - Dr Comfort, Mr Sex
Gerontologist, pacifist, novelist, medical doctor and mollusc expert – Alex Comfort was far more than just the author of the staggeringly popular Joy of Sex. In her review of a new biography, Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite navigates the convictions and contradictions of this bewilderingly polymathic thinker. She joins Tom to trace Comfort’s life from evangelical child prodigy to the anarchist free love advocate who became emblematic of the sexual liberation movement.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/comfortpod
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Wed, 21 Feb 2024 - 52min - 478 - The World's First Author
Enheduana was a Sumerian princess who lived around 2300 BCE and composed what is now regarded as the earliest poetry by a known author. Her father, Sargon of Akkad, is said to have created the world’s first empire, stretching from the Persian Gulf to the Mediterranean, and as part of his imperial mission he installed his daughter as the high priestess of the temple of the moon god, Nanna, in the city of Ur. In that capacity, Enheduana composed hymns of remarkable beauty, often governed by a powerful authorial voice.
Anna Della Subin joins Tom to discuss a new translation of Enheduana’s complete poems, read some of them in the original Sumerian, and consider the ways in which they challenge our ideas of authorship and literary history.
Read more, and listen ad free, on the LRB website: https://lrb.me/enheduanapod
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Wed, 14 Feb 2024 - 45min - 477 - Protest, what is it good for?
From the Egyptian Revolution to Extinction Rebellion, the 2010s were marked by a global wave of spontaneous and largely structureless mass protests. Despite overwhelming numbers and popular support, most of these movements failed to achieve their aims, and in many cases led to worse conditions. James Butler joins Tom to make sense of the ‘mass protest decade’, sharing historical examples, theoretical approaches and first-hand experiences that help explain the defeats of the 2010s.
Find further reading and listen ad free on the episode page: lrb.me/protestdecade
Find the Close Readings podcast in Apple, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts, or just search 'Close Readings'.
Sign up to the Close Readings subscription to listen to all our series in full:
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Wed, 07 Feb 2024 - 59min - 476 - Political Poems: Andrew Marvell's 'An Horatian Ode upon Cromwell's Return from Ireland'
In the first episode of their new Close Readings series on political poetry, Seamus Perry and Mark Ford look at ‘An Horatian Ode upon Cromwell’s Return from Ireland’ by Andrew Marvell, described by Frank Kermode as ‘braced against folly by the power and intelligence that make it possible to think it the greatest political poem in the language’.
Sign up to the Close Readings subscription to listen ad free and to all our series in full:
Further reading in the LRB:
David Norbrook: Political Verse
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Wed, 31 Jan 2024 - 34min - 475 - War in Tigray
Ethiopia is one of the world’s most populous countries, and yet the 2020-22 Tigray War and ongoing suffering in the region has been largely ignored by the world at large. Tom Stevenson joins the podcast to break down the history of the conflict, and explore why Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, a Nobel laureate, has come to preside over such a brutal civil war. He also considers Abiy’s future intentions, both within and beyond his country’s borders.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/tigraypod
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Wed, 24 Jan 2024 - 45min - 474 - Medieval LOLs: Chaucer's 'Miller's Tale'
Were the Middle Ages funny? Irina Dumitrescu and Mary Wellesley begin their series in quest of the medieval sense of humour with Chaucer’s 'Miller’s Tale', a story that is surely still (almost) as funny as when it was written six hundred years ago. But who is the real butt of the joke? Mary and Irina look in detail at the mechanics of the plot and its needless but pleasurable complexity, and consider the social significance of clothes and pubic hair in the tale.
Find the Close Readings podcast in Apple, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts, or just search 'Close Readings'.
Sign up to the Close Readings subscription to listen to all our series in full:
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Wed, 17 Jan 2024 - 30min - 473 - Proust in English
Did the foundational event of Proust’s great novel really happen? Michael Wood talks to Tom about several English translations of In Search of Lost Time, old and new, and what they reveal about different ways of reading the novel. If the dipping of the madeleine in his tea conjures an overwhelming memory of the narrator’s childhood, it is also a challenge to the conscious mind, a product of chance that Proust suggests might easily not have occurred at all.
Find more by Michael on Proust here: lrb.me/woodproustpod
Sign up to Close Readings Plus: lrb.me/plus
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Wed, 10 Jan 2024 - 46min - 472 - New TV/Old TV
James Meek joins Tom to talk about a recent book by Peter Biskind on ‘the New TV’, reviewed by James in the latest issue of the paper. They discuss the rise of cable TV in the 1990s, the emergence of the streaming giants, the power of the showrunner and whether the golden age of television drama is really coming to an end.
Read James's piece: https://lrb.me/meektvpod
Sign up to Close Readings: lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Wed, 03 Jan 2024 - 51min - 471 - Was Jane Austen Gay? And other questions from the LRB archive
Tom Crewe, Patricia Lockwood, Deborah Friedell, John Lanchester, Rosemary Hill and Colm Tóibín talk to Tom about some of their favourite LRB pieces, including Terry Castle’s 1995 essay on Jane Austen's letters, Hilary Mantel’s account of how she became a writer, and Alan Bennett’s uncompromising take on Philip Larkin.
Read the pieces:
Wendy Doniger: Calf and Other Loves
Hilary Mantel: Giving up the Ghost
Angela Carter: Noovs' hoovs in the trough
Penelope Fitzgerald on Stevie Smith
Subscribe to the LRB: https://lrb.me/now
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Wed, 27 Dec 2023 - 40min - 470 - Byron before Byron
Byron’s early poems – his so-called ’dark tales’ – have been dismissed by critics as the tawdry, slapdash products of an uninteresting mind, and readers ever since have found it difficult not to see them in light of the poet’s dramatic and public later life. In a recent piece for the LRB, Clare Bucknell looked past the famous biography to observe the youthful Byron’s mind at work in poems such as The Giaour (1813), The Corsair (1814) and Lara (1814), where early versions of the Byronic hero were often characterised by passivity, rumination and choicelessness.
Clare discusses the piece with Tom, and talks about her new Close Readings series, On Satire, with Colin Burrow, which features Don Juan alongside works by Jane Austen, Laurence Sterne, John Donne, Muriel Spark and others.
Read Clare's piece on Byron: https://lrb.me/byronpod
Join Clare and Colin Burrow for their series on satire next year, and receive all the books under discussion, access to online seminars and the rest of the Close Readings audio, with Close Readings Plus: https://lrb.me/plusyt
To subscribe to the audio only, and access all our other Close Readings series:
Sign up directly in Apple here: https://apple.co/3pJoFPq
In other podcast apps: https://lrb.me/byronsc
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Wed, 20 Dec 2023 - 39min - 469 - Manutius, the Biblophile's Bibliophile
In Renaissance Venice, Aldus Manutius turned his mid-life crisis into a publishing revolution, printing books that permanently changed the way we read. In a recent review, Erin Maglaque celebrates Aldus as the progenitor of the paperback and a model for late bloomers. She tells Tom about Aldus’s achievements, his monumental ego and his part in the creation of one of the most bizarre books in publishing history.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/manutiuspod
Subscribe to Close Readings Plus here: https://lrb.me/plus
Or just sign up to the Close Readings podcast subscription:
In Apple Podcasts: lrb.me/camusapple
In other podcast apps: lrb.me/camussc
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Wed, 13 Dec 2023 - 44min - 468 - Camus in the Americas
Feverish, homesick, bored, awed and on rollerskates: Albert Camus’s travel diaries are a fascinating window into an easily mythologised life. Camus visited the New World twice, and a new translation of his journals reveals his struggle to make sense of his experiences. Adam Shatz joins Tom to explain the ways Camus’s ambivalence towards the Americas sheds light on his tumultuous personal life, his conflicted stance on colonialism and where his humanism deviates from his existentialist peers.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/camuspod
If you want to join Adam Shatz, Judith Butler, Pankaj Mishra and Brent Hayes Edwards on revolutionary thinkers next year, and receive all the books under discussion, access to online seminars and the rest of the Close Readings audio, you can sign up to Close Readings Plus here: https://lrb.me/plus
Or just sign up to the Close Readings podcast subscription:
In Apple Podcasts: lrb.me/camusapple
In other podcast apps: lrb.me/camussc
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Wed, 06 Dec 2023 - 44min - 467 - Patricia Lockwood on Meeting the Pope
In June, the pope invited dozens of artists to Rome for the 50th anniversary of the Vatican Museum’s contemporary art collection. Patricia Lockwood, the author of Priestdaddy and a contributing editor at the LRB, was one of them. She tells Tom more about the surreal experience and why irony, in the words of Pope Francis, is ‘a marvellous virtue’.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/popepod
Read John Lanchester’s pick from the archive: lrb.me/lanchesterpick
Subscribe to the LRB here: lrb.me/now
Find out about the Colour Revolution exhibition at the Ashmolean Museum here:
https://www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/colour-revolution-victorian-art-fashion-design
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Wed, 29 Nov 2023 - 48min - 466 - What was Orwell for?
George Orwell wasn’t afraid to speak against totalitarianism – but what was he for? Colin Burrow joins Tom to unpick the cultural conservatism and crackling violence underpinning Orwell’s writing, to reassess his vision of socialism and to figure out why teenagers love him so much.
If you want to join Colin Burrow and Clare Bucknell for their series on satire next year, and receive all the books under discussion, access to online seminars and the rest of the Close Readings audio, you can sign up to Close Readings Plus here: https://lrb.me/plus
Or just sign up to the Close Readings podcast subscription:
In Apple Podcasts: https://lrb.me/orwellapple
In other podcast apps: https://lrb.me/orwellsc
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/orwellpod
Find out about the Colour Revolution exhibition at the Ashmolean Museum here:
https://www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/colour-revolution-victorian-art-fashion-design
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Wed, 22 Nov 2023 - 51min - 465 - Next Year on Close Readings: Among the Ancients II
For the final introduction to next year’s full Close Readings programme, Emily Wilson, celebrated classicist and translator of Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey, returns for a second season of Among the Ancients, to take on another twelve vital works of Greek and Roman literature with the LRB’s Thomas Jones, loosely themed around ‘truth and lies’ – from Aesop’s Fables to Marcus Aurelius’s Meditations.
Authors covered: Hesiod, Aesop, Herodotus, Pindar, Plato, Lucian, Plautus, Terence, Lucan, Tacitus, Juvenal, Apuleius, Marcus Aurelius.
First episode released on 24 January 2024, then on the 24th of each month for the rest of the year.
How to Listen
Close Readings subscription
Directly in Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3pJoFPq
In other podcast apps: lrb.me/closereadings
Close Readings Plus
In addition to the episodes, receive all the books under discussion; access to webinars with Emily, Tom and special guests including Amia Srinivasan; and shownotes and further reading from the LRB archive.
On sale here from 22 November: lrb.me/plus
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Sat, 18 Nov 2023 - 11min - 464 - Next Year on Close Readings: Human Conditions
In the second of three introductions to our full Close Readings programme for 2024, Adam Shatz presents his series, Human Conditions, in which he’ll be talking separately to three guests – Judith Butler, Pankaj Mishra and Brent Hayes Edwards – about some of the most revolutionary thought of the 20th century.
Judith, Pankaj and Brent will each discuss four texts over four episodes, as they uncover the inner life of the 20th century through works that have sought to find freedom in different ways and remake the world around them. They explore, among other things, the development of arguments against racism and colonialism, the experience of artistic expression in oppressive conditions and how language has been used in politically substantive ways.
Authors covered: Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Frantz Fanon, Hannah Arendt, V. S. Naipaul, Ashis Nandy, Doris Lessing, Nadezhda Mandelstam, W. E. B. Du Bois, Aimé Césaire, Amiri Baraka and Audre Lorde.
First episode released on 14 January 2024, then on the fourteenth of each month for the rest of the year.
How to Listen
Close Readings subscription
Directly in Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3pJoFPq
In other podcast apps: lrb.me/closereadings
Close Readings Plus
In addition to the episodes, receive all the books under discussion; access to webinars with Adam and his guests; and shownotes and further reading from the LRB archive.
On sale here from 22 November: lrb.me/plus
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Fri, 17 Nov 2023 - 25min - 463 - Next Year on Close Readings: On Satire
In the first of three introductions to our full 2024 Close Readings programme, starting in January, Colin Burrow and Clare Bucknell present their series, On Satire. Over twelve episodes, Colin and Clare will attempt to chart a stable course through some of the most unruly, vulgar, incoherent, savage and outright hilarious works in English literature, as they ask what satire is, what it’s for and why we seem to like it so much.
Authors covered: Erasmus, John Donne, Ben Jonson, Earl of Rochester, John Gay, Alexander Pope, Laurence Sterne, Jane Austen, Lord Byron, Oscar Wilde, Evelyn Waugh and Muriel Spark.
Colin Burrow and Clare Bucknell are both fellows of All Souls College, Oxford, and regular contributors to the LRB.
First episode released on 4 January 2024, then on the fourth of each month for the rest of the year.
How to Listen
Close Readings subscription
Directly in Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3pJoFPq
In other podcast apps: lrb.me/closereadings
Close Readings Plus
In addition to the episodes, receive all the books under discussion; access to webinars with Colin, Clare and special guests including Lucy Prebble and Katherine Rundell; and shownotes and further reading from the LRB archive.
On sale here from 22 November: lrb.me/plus
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Thu, 16 Nov 2023 - 14min - 462 - The Infected Blood Scandal
In the 1970s and '80s, thousands of haemophiliacs in the UK were infected with HIV and hepatitis C through blood products known to be contaminated. In a recent piece, Florence Sutcliffe-Braithewaite outlines the magnitude of the scandal, exacerbated by carelessness, corporate greed and, in one instance, deliberate human experimentation. She joins Malin to discuss the findings and what they mean for survivors. They are joined by Tom Crewe, who reckoned with the Aids crisis in his 2018 article ‘Here was a plague’.
Find Florence and Tom’s articles on the episode page: lrb.me/bloodinquirypod
Read Colm Tóibín's pick from the LRB archive: lrb.me/colmpod
Subscribe to the LRB here: lrb.me/now
Find out about the Colour Revolution exhibition at the Ashmolean Museum here:
https://www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/colour-revolution-victorian-art-fashion-design
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Wed, 15 Nov 2023 - 51min - 461 - The Giant Crypto Fraud
When Sam Bankman-Fried was found guilty of fraud last week, the only surprise was how quickly the jury reached their verdict. John Lanchester joins Tom to discuss how the former crypto billionaire ended up facing a life sentence, from his early career in finance and embrace of Effective Altruism to the simple but audacious nature of his crime, and why he found himself in a US court, even though US citizens were banned from using his trading company, FTX.
Read John Lanchester on Sam Bankman-Fried: lrb.me/sbfpod
Read Rosemary Hill's pick from the LRB archive: lrb.me/rosemarypod
Subscribe to the LRB here: lrb.me/now
Find out about the Colour Revolution exhibition at the Ashmolean Museum here:
https://www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/colour-revolution-victorian-art-fashion-design
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Wed, 08 Nov 2023 - 56min - 460 - What is British humour anyway?
Anglophiles abroad love the British sense of humour – but what does that actually mean? In a recent review for the paper, Jonathan Coe takes a scalpel to the satire boom and its aftermath to find out what, if anything, sets British comedy apart. He joins Malin for a serious chat about comedy and its double-edged role in the UK’s political life.
Further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/coecomedy
Subscribe to the LRB here: lrb.me/now
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Wed, 01 Nov 2023 - 36min - 459 - Colour Revolution at the Ashmolean (sponsored)
Nineteenth-century Britain is often imagined as gloomy and dark, epitomised by Dickensian grime and Queen Victoria’s prolonged state of black-clad mourning. But in reality this period saw an explosion of colour, following a number of scientific discoveries.
In this short discussion, Charlotte Ribeyrol, co-curator of Colour Revolution, a major new exhibition at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, talks about some of those technical advances and the dazzling objects visitors will find on display at the show, from jewel-like Pre-Raphaelite paintings to bookcases and socks, as well as some of the debates of the time – between Ruskin, Darwin and others – about the meaning of colour in nature and society.
Colour Revolution runs at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford until 18th February 2024. Find out more here:
https://www.ashmolean.org/exhibition/colour-revolution-victorian-art-fashion-design
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Tue, 31 Oct 2023 - 5min - 458 - Who wrote the dictionary?
Compiling the first edition of the Oxford English Dictionary was a seventy-year endeavour that called on thousands of volunteers from all walks of life. The Dictionary People, reviewed by Daisy Hay in the LRB, is a recent attempt to track down the various characters who made the OED possible. Daisy joins Tom to discuss how contributors and their enthusiasms shaped the dictionary to this day.
Further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/dictionarypod
Learn more about the Irish Pages Press: irishpages.org/
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Wed, 25 Oct 2023 - 36min - 457 - War in Gaza
As the siege on Gaza intensifies, many observers are describing the current Hamas-Israel conflict as a complete overhaul of the region’s status quo. Amjad Iraqi, a senior editor at +972 Magazine, and Michael Sfard, a leading human rights lawyer, join Adam Shatz to discuss the roots and ramifications of the current crisis. This conversation was recorded on 17 October.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/waringazapod
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Wed, 18 Oct 2023 - 55min - 456 - Tom Crewe: Wrestling Days
Crass, violent, misogynistic, dumb, fake – and irresistible. Tom Crewe was one of many unlikely diehards who fell sway to the theatre of pro-wrestling, despite and because of its excesses. Here, he reads his 2021 piece unpacking his youthful obsession with a sport both ‘hideous’ and ‘Homeric’.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/wrestlingdays
Subscribe to Close Readings:
In Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3pJoFPq
In other podcast apps: lrb.me/closereadings
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Wed, 11 Oct 2023 - 16min - 455 - Into the Volcano
Between 1630 and 1944, Mount Vesuvius was continually erupting, and remains one of the world’s most dangerous volcanoes. Yet, as Rosemary Hill explains in a recent piece, the volcano exerted an irresistible pull on poets, tourists and statesmen. She tells Tom how the 19th century’s obsession with Vesuvius spawned scientific disciplines, artistic innovations and nude intracrater picnics.
Further reading and listening on the episode page: lrb.me/intothevolcano
Listen to Rosemary’s recent series on Stonehenge: lrb.me/stonehengepodone
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Wed, 04 Oct 2023 - 45min - 454 - What is 'woke capital'?
For many on the right, Arif Naqvi epitomises the idea of the 'woke capitalist'. The private equity multimillionaire has promoted sustainable development and donated heavily to the Gates Foundation to invest in healthcare, but now awaits possible extradition to the US on fraud charges. Laleh Khalili joins Tom to discuss Naqvi’s story, and what goes wrong when private equity firms look to profit from public services.
Read Laleh's piece here: https://lrb.me/khalilipod2
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Wed, 27 Sep 2023 - 58min - 453 - Think of a Number
In a world where communication is only as effective as its ‘truthiness’, numbers are vital to political success. But, as John Lanchester explains on this week’s episode, some of the most influential stats in UK politics are ‘pants’. John joins Tom to discuss why GDP, immigration numbers and English Premier League odds are so frequently misleading, and how we can be better attuned to the misuse of data.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/thinkofanumber
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Wed, 20 Sep 2023 - 46min - 452 - Adolfo Kaminsky, Beyond Borders
Adolfo Kaminsky, a first-class forger while still a teenager, saved thousands of lives as an agent of the French Resistance. After the war, he turned his counterfeiting skills towards anticolonialist causes while building his reputation as a photographer. In this episode of the LRBpodcast, Adam Shatz reads his piece on Kaminsky, whom he met in 2019. 'Forgery wasn‘t just an art he perfected,' Shatz writes, 'but a vocation and an ethics.'
Find more by Adam Shatz at the episode page: lrb.me/beyondborders
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Wed, 13 Sep 2023 - 31min - 451 - Fact-Checking ‘Ulysses’
Armed with Thom’s Directory, James Joyce strove to recreate 1904 Dublin as accurately as possible, down to the last solicitor and street railing. But, as Colm Tóibín explains in a recent piece, the novel is pockmarked with errors, only some intentional. Colm joins Tom to discuss Joyce’s deliberate and accidental mistakes, Trieste’s essential influence on the novel, and why a queer reading of Ulysses really does hold water.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/factcheckingjoyce
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Wed, 06 Sep 2023 - 44min - 450 - Amia Srinivasan: The Sucker, the Sucker!
‘Octopuses,’ Amia Srinivasan writes, ‘are the closest we can come, on earth, to knowing what it might be like to encounter intelligent aliens.’ In our third summer reading, Srinivasan explores the paradoxical nature of octopus lives, and the difficulties humans have in understanding them.
Read more by Amia Srinivasan in the LRB: lrb.me/srinivasanpod
Let us know your thoughts: lrb.me/podsurvey
Produced by Zoe Kilbourn; editing by Sarah Sahim
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Wed, 30 Aug 2023 - 33min - 449 - John Lanchester: The Case of Agatha Christie
Agatha Christie, writes John Lanchester, ‘is the only writer by whom I’ve read more than fifty books. So – why?’ In the second of our summer readings, Lanchester dissects Christie’s compulsive readability, and considers why, despite her brazen lack of style, she was a great experimental formalist.
Read more John Lanchester in the LRB: lrb.me/lanchesterpod
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Produced by Zoe Kilbourn; editing by Sarah Sahim
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Wed, 23 Aug 2023 - 39min - 448 - Terry Castle: Desperately Seeking Susan
In the first of our summer readings, Terry Castle reads her 2005 piece about her “on-again, off-again, semi-friendship” with Susan Sontag. She remembers Sontag as a “great comic character”: a high-minded hobnobber, a moralist and a gossip, seductive and snobbish and a catalytic force for modern feminism.
Read more Terry Castle in the LRB: lrb.me/castlepod
Let us know your thoughts: lrb.me/podsurvey
Produced by Zoe Kilbourn; editing by Sarah Sahim
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Wed, 16 Aug 2023 - 48min - 447 - Life in Kyiv
Almost eighteen months since Russia invaded Ukraine, Kyiv residents have resumed something resembling pre-war life. James Meek recently returned to the city, and joins Tom to discuss the new normal: how language is changing and ravers are rebuilding destroyed villages, and what we can expect in the coming months of warfare.
Find further reading, and an example of Repair Together in action, on the episode page: lrb.me/lifeinkyiv
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Wed, 09 Aug 2023 - 1h 01min - 446 - Chaucer's Ovid
Irina Dumitrescu joins Tom for a Close Readings fusion episode looking at Chaucer’s classical mind, and in particular his use of Ovid’s Heroides in The Legend of Good Women, in which the poet does penance for his poor depictions of women by retelling the stories of Ariadne, Phaedra, Lucrece and others in a more sympathetic light. They discuss Chaucer’s playful attitude to his sources and his mix of humour with serious observations on the presentation of women and their suffering in the classical tradition.
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Wed, 02 Aug 2023 - 46min - 445 - The Secrets of J. Edgar Hoover
As Director of the FBI, J. Edgar Hoover exercised a dictatorial influence over the department – and, it seems, everyone else. Meticulous and vindictive, he frequently weaponised secrets while carefully guarding his own. Deborah Friedell grapples with his overwhelming and disturbing legacy in her sweeping review of G-Man, the first Hoover biography in thirty years. She joins Tom to discuss some of the most puzzling features of Hoover’s personality and approach to policing. Should he have known about Pearl Harbor? Was he in cahoots with the Mafia? And what was his problem with bald men?
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/hooverpod
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Wed, 26 Jul 2023 - 46min - 444 - On David Foster Wallace
In her recent piece for the paper, Patricia Lockwood revisits David Foster Wallace’s work in the light of posthumous publications and the shadow of #MeToo. Lockwood joined Joanne O’Leary, an editor at the paper, to discuss Wallace’s troubled status as Saint Dave, where his writing was at its best and whether a novel can benefit from being left unfinished.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/dfwpod
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Thu, 20 Jul 2023 - 44min - 443 - Inflation Fixation
As inflation continues to outstrip wage growth for all but the top ten per cent of earners, interest rates look set to keep rising at least until February 2024. The political economist William Davies joins Tom to consider the reasons for high inflation and the Bank of England’s response, what government policies could alleviate the crisis and whether next year’s general election will lead to any significant change.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/inflationfixation
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Tue, 11 Jul 2023 - 53min - 442 - Cancelled
Last month, the UK government appointed their first “free speech tsar”, whose stated mission is to protect free speech and academic freedom in universities. But, as Amia Srinivasan argues in a recent article, there's an inherent conflict in those goals. Amia joins Malin to discuss the Higher Education (Freedom of Speech) act, whether students are increasingly leaning left and how activists across the political spectrum weaponise the concept of harm.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/cancelled
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Tue, 04 Jul 2023 - 47min - 441 - The Lives of Stonehenge: John Michell and Arthur Pendragon
For her final leg across Salisbury Plain, Rosemary Hill is joined by folklorist Jeremy Harte to look at the many groups and stories that have emerged throughout the 20th century to challenge the narratives about Stonehenge presented by archaeologists. From astro-archaeology to the Earth Mysteries Movement, they look out how colonial models of Stonehenge’s history have been overturned and the whole notion of public ownership repeatedly tested, sometimes with violent consequences, since the stone circle was gifted to the nation in 1918, and why it (almost) always comes back to druids.
Buy Rosemary Hill's book Stonehenge: lrb.me/stonehengebook
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Tue, 27 Jun 2023 - 45min - 440 - The Lives of Stonehenge: Wordsworth and Blake
For the third episode in her short series on Stonehenge, Rosemary Hill is joined by Seamus Perry to experience the stone circle through the mind and eyes of a Romantic, with the likes of Wordsworth, Blake, Turner and Constable. For these poets and artists, Salisbury Plain took on a gloomy and richly psychological presence, lit with intense personal and political drama, and animated with revolutionary thought.
Buy Rosemary Hill's book Stonehenge from the LRB Bookshop here: lrb.me/stonehengebook
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Tue, 20 Jun 2023 - 45min - 439 - Africa’s Cold War
Kevin Okoth and Jeremy Harding join Tom to discuss two recent books reassessing decolonisation. Textbook histories used to describe African independence as more or less complete by the mid-1960s, but millions of people were fighting white minority rule into the 1970s and 1980s, while Cold War rivalry between the US, the Soviet Union and China played out across the continent, often with catastrophic consequences. As countries continue to vie for Africa’s natural resources, its postcolonial future remains, at best, unresolved.
Find further reading, and listen ad-free, on the LRB website: lrb.me/africascoldwarpod
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Tue, 13 Jun 2023 - 47min - 438 - The Lives of Stonehenge: John Aubrey and William Stukeley
In the second episode of her short series looking at why Stonehenge has occupied such an important place in the story of Britain, Rosemary Hill talks to Kate Bennett about the two antiquarians, John Aubrey and William Stukeley, who first treated the stone circle as a material object whose secrets could be revealed through careful measurement, observation and comparison, and so pioneered many of the practices of modern archaeology.
Find further reading on the LRB website: lrb.me/stonehengepodtwo
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Tue, 06 Jun 2023 - 43min - 437 - Why did Erdoğan win?
Following the Turkish president’s success in the run-off election on Sunday, Izzy Finkel and Tom Stevenson join Tom to discuss whether Erdoğan’s victory was ever in doubt, why the recent devastating earthquakes and economic turmoil seem to have had so little impact on his support, the challenges faced by the opposition, and the growing importance of xenophobia in Turkey’s politics.
Find further reading, and listen ad-free, on the LRB website: lrb.me/erdoganpod
Sign up to the LRB's Close Readings podcast here: lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Tue, 30 May 2023 - 44min - 436 - The Lives of Stonehenge: Inigo Jones and John Wood
Rosemary Hill begins a new four-part series looking at what people have thought about Stonehenge over the past few hundred years, and why it’s come to matter so much in the story of Britain. In the first episode she talks to architectural historian Vaughan Hart about how Inigo Jones and John Wood were inspired by Stonehenge in their designs for Covent Garden and Bath, and how those in turn had an enormous influence on the way British towns and cities look today, from squares and circuses to oversized acorns and the idea of architecture itself.
Buy Rosemary Hill's book Stonehenge here: lrb.me/stonehengebook
Vaughan Hart is the author of numerous books on the history of architecture, including Inigo Jones: the Architect of Kings;Christopher Wren: In Search of Eastern Antiquityand Nicholas Hawksmoor: Rebuilding Ancient Wonders.
Sign up to the LRB's Close Readings podcast here: lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Tue, 23 May 2023 - 44min - 435 - How radical is Scotland?
Rory Scothorne joins Tom to discuss the evolution of Scottish politics over the past century or so, and how best to understand a country that’s shifted from a centre right electoral majority in the 1950s to a Labour stronghold in the 1980s, to being governed by the SNP since 2007. Is Scotland’s left-wing tradition a myth? And with the loss of Nicola Sturgeon as SNP leader, and the recent scandals hitting the party, what are the prospects for Scottish independence?
Read Rory's piece in the LRB: https://lrb.me/scothornepod
Sign up for the LRB's Close Readings podcast here: lrb.me/closereadings
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Tue, 16 May 2023 - 44min - 434 - What Spotify Wants
Spotify, a company worth $23 billion, has come out on top of the streaming wars, and yet it’s never made a profit. Daniel Cohen joins Malin to discuss the history of the platform and how it's changed the way music is made and listened to, and the strangeness of streaming culture, rife with ethical dilemmas.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/spotifypod
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Tue, 09 May 2023 - 52min - 433 - Modi's Big Con
Accused of ‘the largest con in corporate history’, Indian magnate Gautam Adani has lost half his net worth and the indulgence of financial journalists. As Adani comes under increasing scrutiny, so do his troubling political connections – not least with India's prime minister, Narendra Modi. Pankaj Mishra joins Tom to discuss Adani and Modi’s intertwined careers, and their shared role in shaping an increasingly ethnonationalist, plutocratic India.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/modipod
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Tue, 02 May 2023 - 44min - 432 - Thomas Hardy's Medieval Mind
Two worlds collide in this Close Readings fusion episode in which Mary Wellesley talks to Mark Ford about the medieval in Thomas Hardy and the wider Victorian imagination. They discuss why Hardy liked to present himself as an Arthurian knight, his satirisation of the chivalric ideal in his novel A Pair of Blue Eyes, and the way his training as an architect influenced his devotion to poetic spontaneity and experimentation.
Sign up for Close Readings here: https://lrb.me/closereadings
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Tue, 25 Apr 2023 - 50min - 431 - Introducing Past Present Future
Past Present Futureis a new weekly podcast with David Runciman, host of Talking Politics, exploring the history of ideas from politics to philosophy, culture to technology. David talks to historians, novelists, scientists and many others about where the most interesting ideas come from, what they mean, and why they matter.
Ideas from the past, questions about the present, shaping the future.
Brought to you in partnership with the London Review of Books.
New episodes every Thursday. Just subscribe to Past Present Future wherever you get your podcasts.
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Fri, 21 Apr 2023 - 2min - 430 - Sisters Come Second
In his introduction to our twelfth collection of LRB archive pieces, Sisters Come Second, Colm Tóibín writes that most siblings dream of being only children. Malin Hay explores this idea with Colm and Andrew O’Hagan, both younger sons in big families. Their conversation considers the examples of the brothers Mann, Yeats, James and Windsor, and why, as Czesław Miłosz observed, when there’s a writer in the family, that family is finished.
You can buy Sisters Come Second from the LRB Store for just £5.99: lrb.me/siblings
Find further reading on the episode page: https://lrb.me/siblingspod
Music by Kieran Brunt / Produced by Zoe Kilbourn, Anthony Wilks and Sam Kinchin-Smith
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Tue, 18 Apr 2023 - 45min - 429 - Mary Renault's Worldbuilding
Miranda Carter joins Tom to talk about the life and historical fiction of Mary Renault, whose popular and ingenious retellings of stories from Ancient Greece have never been out of print. They discuss her eventful life, which took her from Edwardian East London to apartheid South Africa, and her meticulous classical reconstructions.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/maryrenaultpod
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Tue, 11 Apr 2023 - 45min - 428 - Sorry State
In the run up to the local elections, and following his recent piece on the care crisis, James Butler joins Tom to discuss some of the other problems facing the UK, and what the two major parties are promising to do to alleviate (or exacerbate) them.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/sorrystate
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Wed, 05 Apr 2023 - 52min - 427 - Pirates of Madagascar
Francis Gooding joins Tom to discuss Pirate Enlightenment, David Graeber’s posthumously published study of 17th- and 18th-century piracy. Golden Age pirates maintained surprisingly egalitarian working practices, Graeber argues, and legendary pirate republics may have been run on similar grounds. Tom and Francis talk about Graeber’s Madagascar-centred research, sift through myth and fact, and ask: was piracy a bullshit job?
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/pirateenlightenment
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Tue, 28 Mar 2023 - 34min - 426 - BookTok
With the future of TikTok increasingly uncertain in the US and other countries, Malin Hay talks to Tom about the app’s powerful reading-focused corner, BookTok: what it is, how it works, and the tropes which dominate its favourite genre, romance fiction. They also look at some recent emails from listeners.
Find further reading on the episode page: https://lrb.me/booktokpod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
Get in touch with the podcasts team: podcasts@lrb.co.uk
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Tue, 21 Mar 2023 - 40min - 425 - How to Plot an Abortion
Expanding on her recent Winter Lecture, Clair Wills talks to Tom about the stories people tell about abortions – stories conditioned by tradition, coerced by the courts, compelled by politics and shared in solidarity. They discuss some of the radical reframings and reimaginings of abortion in art, literature and private life.
Find further reading, including the lecture, on the episode page: lrb.me/clairwillspod
Watch the lecture on YouTube: lrb.me/abortionplot
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Tue, 14 Mar 2023 - 45min - 424 - Climate, Politics and Procreation: Jade Sasser
In the final episode of this series on climate chaos and reproductive justice, Meehan Crist speaks to the feminist scholar Jade Sasser. Jade discusses how advocates for population control harness the language of social justice, her students’ highly personal responses to climate change, and the ways scholarship on climate anxiety has neglected questions of race.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/jadesasserpod
Read the lecture that inspired this series: lrb.me/meehancristlecture
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Tue, 07 Mar 2023 - 45min - 423 - The Reaction Economy
William Davies talks to Tom about his recent LRB Winter Lecture, looking at why reactions – facial expressions, gestures or emojis – have become the main currency of the digital public sphere. Ubiquitous surveillance and smartphones have made the spontaneous reaction a thing to be cultivated, collected and stored. How did we come to endow reaction with such significance, and what might an escape from the reaction economy look like?
Watch the lecture here: https://youtu.be/bNCYo_mEzfQ
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
Get in touch with the podcasts team: podcasts@lrb.co.uk
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Tue, 28 Feb 2023 - 50min - 422 - Climate, Politics and Procreation: Alison Bashford
In the third episode of a four-part series exploring the intersection of climate chaos and reproductive justice, Meehan Crist speaks to historian Alison Bashford. Alison discusses the history of efforts to control population size, how population is thought about in the Anthropocene, and how suspending critique of the past can give valuable insight into the present.
Find the full conversation and further reading at the episode page: lrb.me/bashfordpod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Tue, 21 Feb 2023 - 46min - 421 - The Weirdness of Paul Newman
The screen legend and salad dressing philanthropist Paul Newman recorded hundreds of personal interviews before destroying the tapes. The surviving transcripts, worked into a recent memoir and documentary series, reveal a more complex Newman than his on-screen laconicism would suggest. Bee Wilson speaks to Malin Hay about Newman’s mystique – his passivity, his domesticity and his irresistible blue eyes.
Find Bee's article and further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/paulnewmanpod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
Get in touch with the podcasts team: podcasts@lrb.co.uk
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Tue, 14 Feb 2023 - 40min - 420 - Climate, Politics and Procreation: Banu Subramaniam
In the second episode of a four-part series on climate chaos and reproductive justice, Meehan Crist speaks to Banu Subramaniam, the evolutionary biologist and feminist science scholar. They discuss the global persistence of Malthusian thinking, why the focus of policymakers on population often means focusing on the bodies of poor and marginalised women, and how historical anxiety about ‘invasive’ plant species has mirrored the formation of national borders and attitudes towards human migrants.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/banusubramaniam
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Tue, 07 Feb 2023 - 45min - 419 - The Hayek Puzzle
Long before Margaret Thatcher told her cabinet that The Constitution of Liberty was “what we believe”, neoliberal poster boy Friedrich Hayek had been denounced by his mentor as a socialist. Following his review of a new biography, Jonathan Rée speaks to Tom about Hayek’s celebrity and infamy, and the ways close reading reveals surprising nuance in his work.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/hayekree
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
Get in touch with the podcasts team: podcasts@lrb.co.uk
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Tue, 31 Jan 2023 - 40min - 418 - Climate, Politics and Procreation: Loretta J. Ross
In the first episode of a four-part series exploring the intersection of climate chaos and reproductive justice, Meehan Crist talks to activist and feminist scholar Loretta J. Ross. Ross discusses how she's worked to prevent sexual violence by talking to perpetrators, the problems with today’s call out culture, why the Clinton administration’s healthcare plan prompted the development of the reproductive justice movement in the 1990s, and how to challenge arguments that link fertility with environmental crisis.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/lorettaross
Learn more about SisterSong on their website: https://sistersong.net
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
Get in touch with the podcasts team: podcasts@lrb.co.uk
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Tue, 24 Jan 2023 - 1h 08min - 417 - The Woman Who Interviewed Hitler
In 1939, Dorothy Thompson was on the cover of Time, the ‘First Lady of American journalism’ and a major celebrity. By 1945, she’d been widely dismissed as a crank.
Deborah Friedell joins Tom to discuss Thompson’s enormous influence in interwar America, and her idiosyncratic mix of prescience and short-sightedness.
See further reading on the podcast page: https://lrb.me/dorothythompson
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
Get in touch: podcasts@lrb.co.uk
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Tue, 17 Jan 2023 - 33min - 416 - What do management consultants do?
Laleh Khalili, a former management consultant, talks to Tom about how firms such as McKinsey, Accenture and Bain go about their business, the consequences of their relentless quest for ‘efficiency’, and the role these ‘class war mercenaries’ have played in supporting various governments all over the world.
Find further reading on the podcast page: https://lrb.me/mckinseypod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
Get in touch! Email us at podcasts@lrb.co.uk
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Tue, 10 Jan 2023 - 45min - 415 - How to Choose the Greatest Film of All Time
Michael Wood talks to Malin Hay about the recent list from Sight and Sound of the ‘greatest films of all time’ (in which he voted), and what considerations could, or should, go into compiling such a chart. They also discuss Wood’s most recent review for the LRB, of Bergman’s Fanny and Alexander, and whether there is such a thing as a Christmas movie.
Find more from Michael Wood in the LRB on the episode page: https://lrb.me/greatestfilmpod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
Get in touch! Email us at podcasts@lrb.co.uk
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Tue, 03 Jan 2023 - 36min - 414 - Alan Bennett: Diary for 2022
Alan Bennett reads his 2022 diary (with some extra bits), in which he buys his dad a violin, goes to Venice with a goat, and tries to make the queen laugh.
Listen without ads, and find more from Alan Bennett, on the LRB website: https://lrb.me/2022diarypod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
Get in touch! Email us at podcasts@lrb.co.uk
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Tue, 27 Dec 2022 - 32min - 412 - After the Midterms
Thomas B. Edsall, a columnist for the New York Times, talks to Adam Shatz about the landscape of US politics following the recent elections. They consider some of the historic causes for the apparent polarisation of today’s electorate, and look ahead to the vote in 2024. Will Biden be a credible candidate for re-election? And what would a Trump or DeSantis (or even a Youngkin) candidacy mean for both the Republican and Democratic parties?
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
Subscribe to the LRB from just £1 per issue: https://mylrb.co.uk/podcast20b
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Tue, 13 Dec 2022 - 51min - 411 - Introducing Among the Ancients
Listen to a sample from the first episode of our twelve-part Close Readings series, Among the Ancients, with Emily Wilson and Thomas Jones, which we'll be re-running from January next year. With a new episode each month, Among the Ancients will consider some of the greatest works of Ancient Greek and Roman literature, from Homer to Horace. In this sample Emily and Tom discuss the Iliad.
Sign up to all our Close Readings series here: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Fri, 09 Dec 2022 - 9min - 410 - The Dahl Factory
Roald Dahl's key skill, as Colin Burrow puts it, 'was his ability to repress nastiness while keeping it visible'.
Following his review of a new biography, Burrow talks to Tom Jones about Dahl’s limitations, his successes, and his 'marvellous medicine' approach to fiction.
Find further reading on the episode page: https://lrb.me/dahl
Sign up to our Close Readings subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Tue, 06 Dec 2022 - 45min - 409 - Introducing Medieval Beginnings
Irina Dumitrescu and Mary Wellesley return with a new twelve-part Close Readings series, Medieval Beginnings, exploring the strange and wonderful literary landscape of the Middle Ages. Starting in January 2023, the series will consider well-known works such as Beowulf and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, as well as many lesser-known texts, from across the European continent, that have all helped to lay the foundations of English literature. Listen to a sample here from their first episode, on Beowulf.
Sign up to our Close Readings subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Fri, 02 Dec 2022 - 11min - 407 - Picasso’s Guernica Revisited
In his 2011 Winter Lecture at the British Museum, T.J. Clark shows how the painting of Guernica in May and June 1937 changed the way Picasso imagined space.
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Mon, 14 Feb 2011 - 1h 03min - 406 - Who killed Jane Stanford?
Jane Stanford, the co-founder of Stanford University, was murdered with strychnine in 1905. Her killer was never discovered – until now (perhaps). James Lasdun talks to Malin Hay about a new book by Richard White that investigates the story and looks into the extraordinary history of the Stanford family.
Find further reading on the episode page: lrb.me/stanfordpod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Tue, 29 Nov 2022 - 42min - 405 - Introducing The Long and Short
Seamus Perry and Mark Ford return with a new twelve-part Close Readings series, The Long and Short, taking a fresh look at 19th and 20th-century literature through the lens of short stories and long poems. Starting in January 2023, the series will look at twelve writers, from Tennyson and Henry James to Elizabeth Bowen and Alice Oswald, with a new episode appearing each month. This sample is from the first episode, on Tennyson’s ‘Maud’.
Sign up to our Close Readings subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Fri, 25 Nov 2022 - 10min - 404 - Consider the Pangolin, and Other Animals
Katherine Rundell has been writing about endangered animals in the LRB since 2018. Her new book, The Golden Mole, gathers those essays and new pieces into a bestiary of unusual and underappreciated creatures.
Katherine was joined by LRB editor Alice Spawls in a discussion touching on Elizabethan celebrity bears, Amelia Earhart’s bones, and the greatest lie we’ve ever told: that the world is ours for the taking.
You can read Katherine’s work in the LRB archives: lrb.me/rundell
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Tue, 22 Nov 2022 - 54min - 403 - What is Coral?
Corals have held our fascination for thousands of years, but much of what we know about them has only been discovered recently. Liam Shaw talks to Tom about what corals are and how they form, and their extraordinary variety (over two thousand species have so far been described). They look at some of the milestones in our knowledge of this flower-animal, including Darwin’s account of coral atoll formation, and the importance of the oral history of Indigenous peoples around the coast of Australia in understanding the development of the Great Barrier Reef. As coral reefs now face almost total destruction from climate change, they also consider some of the fixes people have come up with to protect them, and whether it’s possible to put a monetary value on such natural phenomena.
Find further reading on the episode page: https://lrb.me/coralpod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Tue, 15 Nov 2022 - 42min - 402 - Fathers and Sons in Palestine
The writer and human rights lawyer Raja Shehadeh talks to Adam Shatz about his recent memoir, We Could Have Been Friends, My Father and I, which reflects on Shehadeh’s relationship with his father, Aziz, a lawyer who, before his murder in 1985, fought numerous cases for Palestinian rights and was one of the first to advocate a two-state solution.
Find pieces by Raja Shehadeh for the LRB on the episode page: https://lrb.me/shehadehpod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Tue, 08 Nov 2022 - 46min - 401 - Protests in Iran
Azadeh Moaveni talks to Tom about the demonstrations in Iran following the killingof Mahsa Amini in September. They discuss the degree to which the protesters have a shared purpose, the history and significance of the veil in Iranian state policy, the effects of government oppression in the border areas of the country, and how Iran might change after Ayatollah Khamenei.
Find further reading on the episode page: https://lrb.me/iranprotestspod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Tue, 01 Nov 2022 - 52min - 400 - Passports and Spies
Sheila Fitzpatrick talks to Tom about the perils of doing archive research in the Soviet Union, how she used Moscow telephone directories to investigate Stalin’s purges, and the multiple passports and identities she’s gone through in her academic career.
Find further reading in the LRBon the episode page: https://lrb.me/fitzpatrickpod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Tue, 25 Oct 2022 - 39min - 399 - Will the world end in 2178?
Following Nasa’s Dart mission, which successfully fired a spacecraft into the asteroid Dimorphos last month, Chris Lintott talks to Tom about what asteroids can tell us about the history of our planet, how scared we should be of them, and why you should be grateful if one hits your car (so long as you aren’t inside it at the time).
Find further reading, or listen ad-free, on the episode page: https://lrb.me/asteroidpod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
More information about the Nine Dots Prize: https://ninedotsprize.org
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Tue, 18 Oct 2022 - 46min - 398 - Lula v. Bolsonaro
Forrest Hylton talks to Tom about the presidential elections in Brazil, where former president Lula faces the incumbent, Jair Bolsonaro, in the final round of voting. They consider the history of both candidates, their supporters and campaigns, and what’s at stake in the contest.
Find further reading, and listen ad-free, on the episode page: https://lrb.me/brazilpod
Sign up to our Close Readings subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Tue, 11 Oct 2022 - 44min - 397 - On Ian McEwan
Daniel Soar talks to Tom about Ian McEwan’s latest novel, Lessons – how it fits with his earlier fiction, the relationship between world events and private histories, and McEwan’s addiction to ‘moments of maximum thrill’.
Find further reading, and listen ad-free, on the episode page: https://lrb.me/mcewanpod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Tue, 04 Oct 2022 - 42min - 396 - On Jean-Luc Godard
Claire Denis and J. Hoberman join Adam Shatz to talk about the work and legacy of Jean-Luc Godard. They discuss Godard’s early fascination with American cinema, his extraordinary run of films in the 1960s from À bout de souffle to Week-end, and subsequent periods of restless experimentation which continued to confound both audiences and critics until his death this month.
Find further reading on Godard in the LRB on the episode page: https://lrb.me/godardpod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Tue, 27 Sep 2022 - 58min - 395 - Jonathan Meades: Closing Time for the Firm
Writer and filmmaker Jonathan Meades introduces and reads his review of Tina Brown's book about the royal family, The Palace Papers, from April this year.
Read the piece here:https://lrb.me/meadespod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
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Tue, 20 Sep 2022 - 35min - 394 - Grief Totalitarianism
As Britain acquires a new king and new prime minister, and ordinary people are arrested for expressing dislike of the royal family, James Butler and Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite join Tom to consider whether this might be a perilous time for the monarchy, and how the Truss government will go about selling its old-fashioned Thatcherite vision in an era of increasing demands on the state.
Find James's and Florence's pieces via the episode page: https://lrb.me/griefpod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
Title music by Kieran Brunt / Produced by Zoe Kilbourn and Anthony Wilks
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Tue, 13 Sep 2022 - 49min - 393 - Are you a hoarder?
Jon Day talks to Tom about the history and psychology of the accumulation of objects, from Anglo-Saxon treasure to the Collyer twins of Harlem, by way of Freud, Marie Kondo and Day’s own father. When does clutter become a hoard? Are we all digital hoarders now? And should we worry about it?
Read Jon Day's diary, and see the Clutter Image Rating, here: lrb.me/hoardingpod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
Title music by Kieran Brunt / Produced by Anthony Wilks
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Tue, 06 Sep 2022 - 38min - 392 - Green Growth and Degrowth
In the 20th century, the pursuit of economic growth became central to political decision making. As the environmental consequences of this obsession have become increasingly clear, ideas of ‘green growth’ and ‘degrowth’ have emerged as ways of re-organising economies to try to avoid the most catastrophic effects of climate change. Geoff Mann talks to James Butler about these related but often competing approaches, and whether the political structures exist for them to be implemented.
Find further reading, and listen ad free, on our website: lrb.me/degrowthpod
Sign up to our Close Readings podcast subscription: https://lrb.me/closereadingspod
Title music by Kieran Brunt / Produced by Anthony Wilks
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Tue, 30 Aug 2022 - 48min - 391 - From the Bookshop: Elif Batuman and Merve Emre
This week, a guest episode from the London Review Bookshop Podcast, featuring Elif Batuman talking to Merve Emre about her latest book, Either/Or. The London Review Bookshop podcast comes out every week and has hundreds of events in its archive. Find it wherever you get your podcast.
Some events from the London Review Bookshop are broadcast online as well as in person, so you can watch live from anywhere in the world. On Wednesday this week, you can watch food writers Rebecca May Johnson and Jonathan Nunn.
Buy tickets here: https://lrb.me/eventspod
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Tue, 23 Aug 2022 - 1h 21min - 390 - Between Mykolaiv and Kherson
James Meek, recently returned from Mykolaiv, talks to Tom about the area of southern Ukraine that has become a crucial battleground in the war, as Russian forces seek to maintain control of the land they’ve occupied west of the Dnieper, and the Ukrainians try to push them back across the river.
Read James's report from Mykolaiv here: https://lrb.me/mykolaivpod
Watch the short film here: https://lrb.me/mykolaivfilmpod
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Wed, 17 Aug 2022 - 53min
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