Some people don’t like the term Bollywood, feeling that it suggests that Indian cinema is just a kind of appendage of Hollywood. But it’s in wide circulation, sometimes taken to refer to modern Indian cinema in general, more specifically the output of...
This week’s theme is conservation – not environmental conservation, but the care of artefacts. In a recent programme we talked about creativity, but the work of creative artists and craftsmen is dependent on many others for its realization, dissemi...
Of our living neighbours on the planet – land animals, birds, and fish – fish are the ones that seem most aloof from us. Cold-blooded and elusive, they go about their watery existence, indifferent and invisible to us most of the time, until our lives i...
Opera in China has a history of many centuries, and many different forms. Some 350 different kinds of musical drama were identified in a survey in the 1950s. With its colourful costumes and make-up, its stylized and sometimes acrobatic movement, Chines...
This week we want to consider how events become information, and how information becomes news. Crucial to this process is the figure of the reporter, filing the copy for print or electronic media which remains our main source of knowledge about what’s ...
Herman Melville’s Moby Dick was described by the novelist D. H. Lawrence as “one of the strangest and most wonderful books in the world”. Everyone knows the story of Captain Ahab and his obsessive pursuit of vengeance against the white whale; most rea...
By “art image” we mean the artefacts produced by painters, sculptors and other artists in the visual realm, but our subject today is not so much the images themselves, as the way we experience and think about them. When an exhibition of work by Claud...
Our topic this week is the author Eileen Chang – Zhang Ailing. Born in Shanghai in 1920, she was a novelist, short story writer, essayist and translator, and is now recognized as one of the most important of modern Chinese writers. She is associated es...
Human beings have long been fascinated by artificial intelligence. Science fiction could hardly exist without it. But machines that can solve problems by a process that simulates thinking belong to our modern age, and loom very large in any imagination...
Some time ago we did a programme on John Pope Hennessy, the most interesting of the nineteenth-century governors of the colony of Hong Kong. This week we are considering the governorship of one of the giants of the twentieth-century administration of H...
Creativity is the ability to invent, to bring something original into the world. For the ancients, human creativity was an imitation of and homage to the divine being who created heaven and earth. Today we can talk about creativity in all sorts of ...
This week we’re talking about one of the most powerful, and perhaps one of the most vulnerable of political ideas, the Rule of Law. This is the principle that the law is sovereign and everybody in a society, including the Government, should be equally...
Birds have been around a lot longer than humans, but we have a special relationship with these neighbours of ours. Their plumage and their song are among our first examples of beauty: they have inspired artists, poets, composers, and ordinary nature-lo...
The most famous poem of the twentieth century was published in 1922 in the first issue of a literary magazine of almost invisible circulation, edited by the author himself. In fewer than ten years, it had achieved an almost scriptural status for a gene...
Chamber music occupies a place between symphonic and solo music: originally music written to be performed in a room in someone’s home, chamber music has been likened to conversation, in which the different instruments respond to each other, and the ple...
Ludwig Wittgenstein, one of the most important philosophers of the twentieth century, could also be called an anti-philosopher. He was described by his teacher and friend Bertrand Russell as “the most perfect example I have ever known of genius as trad...
For this week’s programme, we’ll be telling ourselves ghost stories. Ji Xiaolan, who lived 1728-1805, was a Qing dynasty scholar and official, a writer and poet, and for a while a favourite of the Qianlong emperor. In the last decade of the 18th centu...
Our Big Idea this week is something that doesn’t exist yet – the future of Africa. The Latin writer Pliny the Elder is credited with saying “Ex Africa semper aliquid novi”: Out of Africa, forever something new. What does the future hold for Africa? We...
The Oxford English Dictionary says “transgender” entered the language as late as 1974, though we can assume the phenomenon it names is a lot older than that. It’s conventional to make a distinction between sex and gender. Your sex is a biological cate...
Dunhuang, in the modern Gansu province of China, was a frontier garrison town at an oasis on the southern Silk Road, where it intersected with the ancient road leading from India, via Lhasa, to Mongolia. In the past Dunhuang had great strategic and co...
David McIlveen
awesome podcasts, thank you so much. genuine curiosity and interesting guests