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A Point of View

Latest episodes

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May 31, 2019 • 10min

Dangerous places, libraries

Val McDermid argues that - at a time when public discourse is so polarised - it's vital to keep our public libraries open. "A library card is a powerful weapon to change lives", Val writes. "With it, we learn how to value what we have, to mourn what we have lost and to dream of what we might become". She says that whatever we may hear about the death of libraries, we must ensure their future because they are "one of the few remaining places where a genuine diversity of voices can still be encountered". Producer: Adele Armstrong
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May 24, 2019 • 9min

Democracy is not in crisis

David Goodhart argues that recent events show that democracy - far from being in crisis - is actually thriving. And in the aftermath of Teresa May announcing her resignation, David writes, "I think there is a great political prize for a politician or a party, old or new, that can speak across the liberal/small-c conservative value divide". Producer: Adele Armstrong
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May 10, 2019 • 9min

Tackling homelessness

Val McDermid argues that if homelessness was classified as an illness, we'd be demanding a cure.She takes a walk round her home city to try to imagine what it would look like through the eyes of a homeless person. Producer: Adele Armstrong
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May 3, 2019 • 9min

What Would Darwin Do?

Rebecca Stott imagines a conversation with Darwin about our environmental concerns
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Apr 26, 2019 • 10min

Get Mad, Then Get Over It!

"While I would love to find a poetic way into this", writes Sarah Dunant, "I think it best just to spit it out. I'm angry. And I have been angry for quite a while now". Sarah says she doesn't see herself as an angry person - but wonders why aggression and outrage seem to have become so much part of our emotional diet. She proposes some solutions - including an National Anger Day - a great moment of catharsis to help us all be a little less....angry! Producer: Adele Armstrong
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Apr 19, 2019 • 9min

After the Fire

"For many Parisians, it's Notre Dame's constancy that's so reassuring" writes Joanna Robertson. "Pass by before dawn, she’s waiting there. Or late at night, amidst the deserted streets, her dark form is holding steady. Notre Dame was inviolable".Joanna Robertson reflects on how the fire is changing that taken-for-granted sight. Producer: Adele Armstrong
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Apr 12, 2019 • 9min

Automation...and a packet of frozen peas

"If you have ever tried to scan a bio-metric passport, an e-ticket or just a packet of frozen peas", writes AL Kennedy, "you'll know that using technology can turn, within moments, into a bizarre ritual of presenting, rubbing, re-presenting, murmured prayers and computer generated instructions which lead either to complete defeat or the intervention of human assistance that could have been there all along". She argues that automation must be governed by human needs and strengths. Personal contact, she believes, is more important than ever. Producer: Adele Armstrong
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Apr 5, 2019 • 9min

On Holding Forth

"There's one thing I can't bear", writes Rebecca Stott, "and that's being talked AT". Having grown up in a separatist fundamentalist Christian sect called the Exclusive Brethren, she says she's probably rather uniquely sensitised to this. She listened to her father and grandfather holding forth for hours - "3000 hours of male monologues before I was six" she reckons! Rebecca reflects on the art of good conversation. Producer: Adele Armstrong
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Mar 29, 2019 • 9min

Brexit: Failure to compromise

John Gray reflects on where British politics goes from here. "Whether Brexit is a good or bad idea," he writes, "is no longer the central issue that Britain is facing." "Instead, the question is whether our political system can survive the damage a mishandled Brexit has inflicted on it." Producer: Adele ArmstrongCorrection: The 1975 referendum took place on the 5th June that year on the UK's continued membership of the European Economic Community which it had joined two years earlier.
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Mar 22, 2019 • 10min

Where there's muck there's art

Sarah Dunant looks at the queasy relationship between art, finance and corruption. Recent protests by the photographer Nan Goldin and others over "dirty money" have hit the headlines. But Sarah argues that without some of this rather dubious funding, the art world would look very different. "What do you want", she asks. "A clean church and white walls? Because there's no doubt that without all of this lamentable corruption we would not have many of the greatest works of art the world has ever seen."Producer: Adele Armstrong

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