To celebrate Melvyn Bragg’s 27 years presenting In Our Time, five well-known fans of the programme have chosen their favourite episodes. Comedian Frank Skinner has picked the episode on the life and work of the poet Emily Dickinson and recorded an introduction to it. (This introduction will be available on BBC Sounds and the In Our Time webpage shortly after the broadcast and will be longer than the version broadcast on Radio 4). Emily Dickinson was arguably the most startling and original poet in America in the C19th. According to Thomas Wentworth Higginson, her correspondent and mentor, writing 15 years after her death, "Few events in American literary history have been more curious than the sudden rise of Emily Dickinson into a posthumous fame only more accentuated by the utterly recluse character of her life and by her aversion to even a literary publicity." That was in 1891 and, as more of Dickinson's poems were published, and more of her remaining letters, the more the interest in her and appreciation of her grew. With her distinctive voice, her abundance, and her exploration of her private world, she is now seen by many as one of the great lyric poets. With Fiona Green Senior Lecturer in English at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Jesus College Linda Freedman Lecturer in English and American Literature at University College London and Paraic Finnerty Reader in English and American Literature at the University of Portsmouth Producer: Simon Tillotson. Reading list: Christopher Benfey, A Summer of Hummingbirds: Love, Art and Scandal in the Intersecting Worlds of Emily Dickinson, Mark Twain, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Martin Johnson Heade (Penguin Books, 2009) Jed Deppman, Marianne Noble and Gary Lee Stonum (eds.), Emily Dickinson and Philosophy (Cambridge University Press, 2013) Judith Farr, The Gardens of Emily Dickinson (Harvard University Press, 2005) Judith Farr, The Passion of Emily Dickinson (Harvard University Press, 1992) Paraic Finnerty, Emily Dickinson’s Shakespeare (University of Massachusetts Press, 2006) Ralph William Franklin (ed.), The Master Letters of Emily Dickinson (University Massachusetts Press, 1998) Ralph William Franklin (ed.), The Poems of Emily Dickinson: Variorum Edition (Harvard University Press, 1998) Linda Freedman, Emily Dickinson and the Religious Imagination (Cambridge University Press, 2011) Gudrun Grabher, Roland Hagenbüchle and Cristanne Miller (eds.), The Emily Dickinson Handbook (University of Massachusetts Press, 1998) Alfred Habegger, My Wars are Laid Away in Books: The Early Life of Emily Dickinson (Random House, 2001) Ellen Louise Hart and Martha Nell Smith (eds.), Open Me Carefully: Emily Dickinson’s Intimate Letters to Susan Huntington Dickinson (Paris Press, 1998) Virginia Jackson, Dickinson’s Misery: A Theory of Lyric Reading (Princeton University Press, 2013) Thomas H. Johnson (ed.), Emily Dickinson: Selected Letters (first published 1958; Harvard University Press, 1986) Thomas H. Johnson (ed.), Poems of Emily Dickinson (first published 1951; Faber & Faber, 1976) Thomas Herbert Johnson and Theodora Ward (eds.), The Letters of Emily Dickinson (Belknap Press, 1958) Benjamin Lease, Emily Dickinson’s Readings of Men and Books (Palgrave Macmillan, 1990) Mary Loeffelholz, The Value of Emily Dickinson (Cambridge University Press, 2016) James McIntosh, Nimble Believing: Dickinson and the Unknown (University of Michigan Press, 2000) Marietta Messmer, A Vice for Voices: Reading Emily Dickinson’s Correspondence (University of Massachusetts Press, 2001) Cristanne Miller (ed.), Emily Dickinson's Poems: As She Preserved (Harvard University Press, 2016) Cristanne Miller, Reading in Time: Emily Dickinson in the Nineteenth Century (University of Massachusetts Press, 2012) Elizabeth Phillips, Emily Dickinson: Personae and Performance (Pennsylvania State University Press, 1988) Eliza Richards (ed.), Emily Dickinson in Context (Cambridge University Press, 2013) Richard B. Sewall, The Life of Emily Dickinson (first published 1974; Harvard University Press, 1998) Marta L. Werner, Emily Dickinson’s Open Folios: Scenes of Reading, Surfaces of Writing (University of Michigan Press, 1996) Brenda Wineapple, White Heat: The Friendship of Emily Dickinson and Thomas Wentworth Higginson (Anchor Books, 2009) Shira Wolosky, Emily Dickinson: A Voice of War (Yale University Press, 1984) This episode was first broadcast in May 2017. Spanning history, religion, culture, science and philosophy, In Our Time from BBC Radio 4 is essential listening for the intellectually curious. In each episode, host Melvyn Bragg and expert guests explore the people, ideas, events and discoveries that have shaped our world In Our Time is a BBC Studios production
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Anything that can increase your awareness and of the world is of a value otherwise nothing is of any value !!!
nauseating lefty idiot
Thats wonderful!! love the stories about the history and culture of Iran.
As an iranian ,never have looked at Ganjavi's work of Art from this angle..amazing, thank you for your amazing podcast.❤️
I love these podcasts. The only thing that lets them down is the volume differences of the contributor voices - some are loud, others one can barely hear, so one has to keep adjusting the volume. This is odd given the BBC's normally high technical standards.
At the end of the Symposium Plato tries to convince the comic poet Aristophanes and the tragic poet Agathon that someone should be able to write both comedy and tragedy. This is what Plato has done. The Symposium is like a theater production. The comedy is the friendly jesting among the characters in between the speeches. The event takes place in 416 BC. In 415 BC, after the disastrous Sicilian Expedition, most of these men will face ruin and disaster. And in 399 BC Athens will execute Socrates.
Another word for the concept of the soul in Plato is the mind. And Plato's famous theory of forms, one of which is beauty, are not external heavenly things but rather internal and fundamental ideas in the human mind. We are born with these concepts. Humans obviously have a built-in set of ideas that allow us to relate to each other in society as well as one on one in a loving relationship. And not just abstract ideas like beauty and justice but also ground rules for acceptable behavior.
I love the accent it's perfect I enjoy every second of this priceless Podcast... fascinating😉
این آدم یه عمر استاندارد پادکستینگه
The same corruption of Christ and his teachings that is present in the political organization of the Catholic Church which Marsilius describes in the 13th Century is manifest in the base and corrupt American Evangelical movement. The Catholic Church is in effect a corporation concerned with amassing wealth for the benefit of the clergy not the benefit of the faithful. In America this group should better be called the evangenitals, a group obsessed with other people's genitals and male dominance.
C
American academics are completely insufferable.
It's Shahnameh, not Shahmaneh
Discrimination/Discernment is good for life !!!!
Wonderful episode!
Considering the Old Testament is one if the only sources we have had on the subject, and makes significant mention of the Hittites, I had hoped to get more discussion on Biblical documentation and its relationship to modern archeological evidence. The modern academic aversion to the Bible is counter productive.
the greatest explosion of human thought thus far in human history.
A rarely awful discussion for IoT. Very disappointing.
Couldn't have chosen a worse male scholar for the topic, but that was the intention, wasn't it?