Episoder

  • The day before the election, James Butler is joined by William Davies to talk about something everyone seems to agree on: the very poor state of the UK’s public finances. The past fourteen years of Conservative rule began with the technocratic austerity of George Osborne and ended with the return of the ‘grown-ups’, Jeremy Hunt and Rishi Sunak, to inflict more pain. In between came the chaos of Brexit and the Truss-Kwarteng ‘mini-budget’. What will a likely Labour government pick up from this? Are we still stuck in the age of Osborne, or will something resembling the public investment strategy of Bidenomics emerge through initiatives such as the National Wealth Fund and Great British Energy, as Rachel Reeves has promised?

    Read Will's latest LRB piece: https://lrb.me/davieselectionpod


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  • ‘The world is growing more dangerous’ warns the Conservative manifesto, which puts security at the heart of its pitch. The Labour manifesto, on the other hand, doesn’t mention the world beyond the UK at all in its five ‘missions’. Are the Tories simply being honest with voters, or trying to distract from their domestic record? In this episode, James Butler is joined by Tom Stevenson and Iona Craig to discuss the challenges facing the next foreign secretary, from Gaza to the pressures of a possible Trump presidency. Labour’s current approach seems to promise ‘Blair without the Iraq War’, but how far will this allow UK foreign policy to depart from its normal attitude of subservience to the United States?

    Read more in the LRB:

    Tom Stevenson on diplomacy: https://lrb.me/stevensonelectionpod

    James Butler's latest election post: https://www.lrb.co.uk/blog/2024/june/new-order


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  • For forty years, Thomas James Wise made a fortune forging copies of books that had never existed, sometimes even convincing their authors they were the real deal. Despite a damning exposé by amateur detectives in the 1930s, Wise never confessed or faced legal repercussions, and his fakes have become collectors’ pieces in their own right. Gill Partington joins Tom to explain Wise’s success and final undoing, and to discuss the value of forgeries, hoaxes and reproductions as art.


    Find further reading on the episode page: https://lrb.me/wisepod

    Find out more about the Royal Literary Fund: https://rlf.org.uk


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  • For the second episode of our series on the UK election, James Butler is joined by Sam Freedman to talk about the enormous challenges facing the next government. From hospital waiting lists to criminal court backlogs and even potholes, the fabric of the British state seems to be beyond repair. It’s not simply a problem of funding: poor management, a lack of scrutiny and extreme centralisation combined with the almost total destruction of local government have all played a part. James and Sam consider whether there’s anything to be done about this chronic dysfunction, and whether the next official opposition could in fact be the Liberal Democrats.

    Sam Freedman is co-author of the substack Comment is Freed. His book Failed State: Why Britain’s Institutions are Broken and How We Fix Them will be released in July 2024.

    Read more from James Butler the LRB:

    James Butler on the crisis in care: https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v45/n05/james-butler/this-concerns-everyone

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  • In the first in a series of episodes on the UK general election, James Butler is joined by Ann Pettifor and Adrienne Buller to discuss climate policy and its apparent absence from the campaign so far. Several years ago the Labour Party was committed to a Green New Deal but has since backed away from that promise, while the Conservatives have decided that abandoning their own climate commitments is a vote-winner. Ann, Adrienne and James consider why political leadership and courage have disappeared on this issue, what environmental policy might look like with a Labour government, and how Chinese bicycles demonstrate the problem of international climate action.

    Read James's latest blog post on the election: https://lrb.me/butlersunakpod

    And more on climate in the LRB:

    Will Davies on why capitalism won't save the planet: https://lrb.me/daviesclimatepod

    James Butler on Andreas Malm and ecoterrorism: https://lrb.me/butlerclimatepod2


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  • From the ghetto's creation in 1516 until its dissolution at the end of the 18th century, Jews in Venice were confined to a district enclosed by canals, patrolled by guards and locked at night. Yet its residents were essential players in Venetian life, and in practice the ghetto saw far more traffic through its gates than its founders intended. Erin Maglaque joins Tom to discuss what life in the ghetto was like, and why an open-air prison could be considered relatively tolerant by the standards of early modern Europe.


    Find further reading on the episode page: https://lrb.me/ghettopod


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  • The D-Day planners said that everything would depended the weather. They needed 'a quiet day with not more than moderate winds and seas and not too much cloud for the airmen, to be followed by three more quiet days'. But who would make the forecast? The Meteorological Office? The US Air Force? The Royal Navy? In the event, it was all three. In this diary piece published in 1994, Lawrence Hogben, a New Zealand-born meteorologist and Royal Navy officer, describes the way this forecasting by committee worked, and why they very almost chose the wrong day.


    Read by Stephen Dillane


    Find the article and further reading on the episode page: https://lrb.me/ddaypod

    Watch the short film based on this piece: https://lrb.me/ddayyt


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  • J.G. Ballard’s life and work contains many incongruities, outraging the Daily Mail and being offered a CBE (which he rejected), and variously appealing to both Spielberg and Cronenberg. In a recent piece, Edmund Gordon unpicks the contradictions and contrarianism in Ballard’s non-fiction writing, and he joins Tom to continue the dissection. They explore Ballard’s strange combination of ‘whisky and soda’ conservatism and the avant-garde, what he was trying to achieve through his fiction, and how ‘Ballardian’ Empire of the Sun really is.


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    In Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3pJoFPq

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  • Marilyn Nance was 23 when she photographed Festac ’77, a global celebration of Black and African art that she described as ‘the Olympics, plus a Biennial, plus Woodstock’. In his review of Nance’s book, Sean Jacobs traces a more fraught history of the festival than her photographs would suggest. Sean joins Tom to discuss what Festac meant for politicians, attendees and the proponents of négritude, third worldism and pan-Africanism.


    Find further reading on the episode page: https://lrb.me/festacpod

    Find out more about Serious Readers: https://www.seriousreaders.com/lrb


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  • Rebecca Solnit has lived in San Francisco since 1980, but the city she used to know is fast disappearing, ‘fully annexed’, as she puts it, by the tech firms from Silicon Valley. In this episode of the LRB podcast, Solnit reads her piece from the 8 February issue of the paper, both a eulogy for the city that’s been lost and a dissection of the dystopia that’s replacing it, ‘returning us’, as she puts it, ‘to a kind of feudalism’.


    Find further reading on the episode page: https://lrb.me/solnitpod

    Find out more about Coram Boy at Chichister Festival Theatre here: https://www.cft.org.uk/events/coram-boy


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  • The recovery of history’s ‘lost’ women is often associated with the advent of feminism, but, Sophie Smith writes, women’s contributions to Western philosophy have been regularly rediscovered since at least the 14th century. She joins Tom to discuss what we can learn from the women who held their own alongside Plato, Descartes and Hume.


    Find Sophie’s piece and further reading on the episode page: https://lrb.me/sophiesmithpod

    Find out more about Pace Gallery’s upcoming exhibitions here: https://www.pacegallery.com/exhibitions/

    Find out more about Coram Boy at Chichister Festival Theatre here: https://www.cft.org.uk/events/coram-boy


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  • 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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  • 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 Bluets here: https://royalcourttheatre.com/whats-on/bluets/


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  • 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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  • 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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  • 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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  • 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:

    Apple Podcasts

    Spotify

    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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  • 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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  • 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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  • 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


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    In other podcast apps: lrb.me/closereadings


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