Episodes

  • 'When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd' by Walt Whitman
    Jul 28 2024

    Whitman wrote several poetic responses to the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. He came to detest his most famous, ‘O Captain! My Captain!’, and in ‘When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd’ Lincoln is not imagined in presidential terms but contained within a love elegy that attempts to unite his death with the 600,000 deaths of the civil war and reconfigure the assassination as a symbolic birth of the new America. Seamus and Mark discuss Whitman’s cosmic vision, with its grand democratic vistas populated by small observations of rural and urban life, and his use of a thrush as a redemptive poetic voice.

    Mark Ford is Professor of English at University College, London, and Seamus Perry is Professor of English Literature at Balliol College, Oxford.

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    34 mins
  • Among the Ancients II: Plautus and Terence
    Jul 24 2024

    In episode seven, we turn to some of the earliest surviving examples of Roman literature: the raucous, bawdy and sometimes bewildering world of Roman comedy. Plautus and Terence, who would go on to set the tone for centuries of playwrights (and school curricula), came from the margins of Roman society, writing primarily for plebeians and upsetting the conventions they simultaneously established. Plautus’ ‘Menaechmi’ is full of coinages, punning and madcap doubling. Terence’s troubling ‘Hecyra’ tells a much darker story of Roman sexual mores while destabilizing misogynistic stereotypes. Emily and Tom discuss how best to navigate these very early and enormously influential plays, and what they lend to Shakespeare, Sondheim and the modern sitcom.


    This is an extract from the episode. To listen in full and to our other Close Readings series, sign up:

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    Emily Wilson is Professor of Classical Studies at the University of Pennsylvania and Thomas Jones is an editor at the London Review of Books.

    Get in touch: podcasts@lrb.co.uk


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    14 mins
  • Medieval LOLs: Solomon and Marcolf
    Jul 18 2024

    The foul-mouthed, mean-spirited peasant Marcolf was one of the most well-known literary characters in late medieval Europe. He appears in many poetic works from the 9th century onwards, but it’s in this dialogue with Solomon, printed in Antwerp in 1492, that we find him at his irreverent and scatological best as they engage in a battle of proverbial wisdom. Mary and Irina consider some of the more startling and perplexing of the riddles and discuss how the development of Marcolf’s earthy rejoinders tells a story about justice and political power.

    Read the text here:

    https://d.lib.rochester.edu/teams/text/bradbury-solomon-and-marcolf

    Sign up to listen to this series ad free and all our subscriber series in full, including Mary and Irina's twelve-part series Medieval Beginnings:

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    Get in touch: podcasts@lrb.co.uk


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    50 mins
  • Human Conditions: ‘The Golden Notebook’ by Doris Lessing
    Jul 10 2024

    Pankaj Mishra joins Adam Shatz to discuss The Golden Notebook, Doris Lessing’s formally brilliant and startlingly frank 1962 novel. In her portrait of ‘free women’ – unmarried, creatively ambitious, politically engaged – Lessing wrestles with the breakdown of Stalinism, settler colonialism and traditional gender roles. Pankaj and Adam explore the lived experiences that shaped the novel, its feminist reception and why Pankaj considers it to be one of the best representations of ‘the strange uncapturable sensation of living from day to day.’


    This is an extract from the episode. To listen in full, and to all our other Close Readings series, sign up:

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    In other podcast apps: lrb.me/closereadings

    Subscribe to series


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    13 mins
  • On Satire: 'The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman' by Laurence Sterne
    Jul 4 2024

    'Tristram Shandy' was such a hit in its day that you could buy tea trays, watch cases and cushions decorated with its most famous characters and scenes. If much of the satire covered in this series so far has featured succinct and damning portrayals of recognisable city types, Sterne’s comic masterpiece seems to offer the opposite: a sprawling and irreducible depiction of idiosyncratic country-dwellers that makes a point of never making its point. Yet many of the familiar satirical tricks are there – from radical shifts in scale to the liberal use of innuendo – and in this episode Clare and Colin look at the ways in which the novel stays true to the traditions of satire while drawing on Cervantes, Rabelais, Locke and the fashionable notion of ‘sentiment’ to advance a new kind of nuanced social comedy.

    This is an extract from the episode. To listen in full, and to all our other Close Readings series, sign up:

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    In other podcast apps: lrb.me/closereadings

    Colin Burrow and Clare Bucknell are both fellows of All Souls College, Oxford.

    Get in touch: podcasts@lrb.co.uk


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    15 mins
  • Political Poems: 'Strange Meeting' by Wilfred Owen
    Jun 28 2024

    Wilfred Owen wrote ‘Strange Meeting’ in the early months of 1918, shortly after being treated for shell shock at Craiglockhart hospital in Edinburgh, where he had met the stridently anti-war Siegfried Sassoon. Sassoon's poetry of caustic realism quickly found its way into Owen’s work, where it merged with the high romantic sublime of his other great influences, Keats and Shelley. Mark and Seamus discuss the unstable mixture of these forces and the innovative use of rhyme in a poem where the politics is less about ideology or argument than an intuitive response to the horror of war.

    Mark Ford is Professor of English at University College, London, and Seamus Perry is Professor of English Literature at Balliol College, Oxford.

    Sign up to the Close Readings subscription to listen ad free and to all our series in full:

    Directly in Apple Podcasts: https://lrb.me/ppapplesignup

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    Further reading in the LRB:

    Seamus Heaney on Auden (and Wilfred Owen): https://lrb.me/pp6heaney


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    36 mins
  • Among the Ancients II: Lucian
    Jun 24 2024

    The broad theme of this series, truth and lies, was a favourite subject of Lucian of Samosata, the last of our Greek-language authors. A cosmopolitan and highly cultured Syrian subject of the Roman Empire in the second century CE, Lucian wrote in the classical Greek of fifth-century Athens. His razor-sharp satire was a model for Erasmus, Voltaire and Swift. Emily and Tom share some of their favourite excerpts from ‘A True History’ and other works – with trips to the moon, boundary-pushing religious scepticism and wildly improbable but not technically untrue readings of Homer – and discuss why they still read as fresh and funny today.


    This is an extract from the episode. To listen in full and to our other Close Readings series, sign up:

    Directly in Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3pJoFPq

    In other podcast apps: lrb.me/closereadings


    Emily Wilson is Professor of Classical Studies at the University of Pennsylvania and Thomas Jones is an editor at the London Review of Books.

    Get in touch: podcasts@lrb.co.uk


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    14 mins
  • Medieval LOLs: The Second Shepherds' Pageant
    Jun 18 2024

    In their quest for the medieval sense of humour Mary and Irina come to The Second Shepherds’ Pageant, a 15th-century reimagining of the nativity as domestic comedy that’s less about the birth of Jesus and more about sheep rustling, taxes, the weather and the frustrations of daily life. The pageant was part of a mystery cycle, a collection of plays that revealed religious mysteries through performances of the Christian story and were a central part of community life. Mary and Irina discuss the porous relationship between player and audience in medieval theatre, and the expert stage management of this knockabout semi-biblical farce.

    Sign up to listen to this series ad free and all our subscriber series in full, including Mary and Irina's twelve-part series Medieval Beginnings:

    Directly in Apple Podcasts: https://lrb.me/medlolapplesignup

    In other podcast apps: https://lrb.me/medlolscsignup

    Get in touch: podcasts@lrb.co.uk


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    35 mins