Arts & Ideas

BBC Radio 4
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Aug 27, 2019 • 34min

Proms Plus: Landscape

Writer and broadcaster, Horatio Clare and the rapper and playwright, Testament join Eleanor Rosamund Barraclough to explore the ways in which the British landscape - urban and rural -- inspires writers. Producer: Zahid Warley
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Aug 22, 2019 • 34min

Proms Plus: Nina Simone's life and legacy

Nina Simone - singer, pianist, civil rights activist and black feminist icon -- Kevin Legendre, Ayanna Witter-Johnson and Zena Edwards discuss her achievements and legacy. Producer: Zahid Warley
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Aug 21, 2019 • 25min

Proms Plus: Beethoven's 9th Symphony

Presenter Seán Williams discusses Beethoven the man and. Through a series of readings we learn what inspired the composer’s work.
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Aug 21, 2019 • 35min

Proms Plus: Kipling's Jungle Books

Anindya Raychaudhuri discusses Kipling's Jungle Books with children's novelist Frances Hardinge and academic Sue Walsh, recorded in front of an audience at Imperial College Union. How does Kipling use language to create character and discuss identity? And can we separate the adventure and storytelling from the imperialist baggage of the Jungle Books? Producer: Luke Mulhall
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Aug 21, 2019 • 21min

Proms Plus: Russian Folktales

Enter a world where huts walk on chicken legs, fish grant wishes and Baba Yaga sharpens her iron tooth with writers Marina Warner and Sophie Anderson. Presented by Victoria Donovan.Producer: Torquil MacLeod
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Aug 18, 2019 • 43min

Revisit Slavery Stories, William Melvyn Kelley & Esi Edugyan

New research on slavery with historians Christienna Fryar, Kevin Waite, and Andrea Livesey. A Different Drummer was the debut novel of Kelley - first published when he was 24. Compared to William Faulkner and James Baldwin, it was forgotten until an article about it led to republication. Kelley died aged 79 in 2017. His story imagines the day the black population of a Southern US town decide to get up and all go. Canadian writer Esi Edugyan has imagined a black slave becoming a scientist in her novel Washington Black. Laurence Scott presents.
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Aug 16, 2019 • 21min

Prom Plus: What Victorians Did For Fun

Historians Lee Jackson and Kathryn Hughes discuss what kept Queen Victoria's subjects amused indoors and outdoors. Presenter: Rana MitterKathryn Hughes, historian and author of Victorians UnboundLee Jackson, the author of Palaces of Pleasure, How the Victorians invented Mass Entertainment.
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Aug 16, 2019 • 29min

Proms Plus: Literary Hoaxes

Berlioz originally presented an early version of The Shepherd's Farewell - part of The Childhood of Christ, at this year's Proms - as the work of ‘Ducré’. It soon emerged that Ducré was not a forgotten 17th century composer, but a hoax created to satirize Parisian high society.Shahidha Bari presents an exploration of the literary hoax - from Thomas Chatterton's invented 15th century monk to faked Shakespeare deeds and a racy "discovered" diary. She is joined Nick Groom, Professor of English at Exeter University and author of "The Forger's Shadow", to guide us through this long and rich tradition.Clive Hayward brings these fraudsters, forgeries and fabulations to life with readings from some of the most creative and audacious examples.Producer: Ciaran Bermingham
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Aug 15, 2019 • 43min

Revisit Napoleon in Fact and Fiction

From Napoleon impersonators, caricature and ballads, to a play which asks what if he didn't die in exile - presenter Anne McElvoy is joined by actor and director Kathryn Hunter, biographer Michael Broers, historians Oskar Cox Jensen and Laura O'Brien and journalist Nabila Ramdani who looks at how Napoleon is viewed in 21st century FranceMichael Broers has published the second instalment of his biography which is called Napoleon The Spirit of The Age. Oskar Cox Jensen has published Napoleon and British Song. Laura O'Brien has published The Republican Line: Caricature and French Republican Identity
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Aug 14, 2019 • 45min

Revisit Mike Leigh in Conversation about Peterloo, politics and his Salford upbringing.

Recorded as his film Peterloo opened in cinemas and repeated now to mark this week's 200th anniversary of the Manchester massacre

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