Posts Tagged ‘lecture’

The Essay: New Archaeologies

May 30th, 2008 by Steve Bowbrick

Here’s another lovely series of Radio 3’s The Essay. In this one we learn from four archaeologists that the discipline extends further than you may have expected. To the surface of the moon (or at least the parts of it affected by human visitors), for instance. Also to Long Kesh/Maze prison in Northern Ireland where Republican hunger strikers died, a wood by a B-road near Sheffield where 19th and 20th Century graffiti artists carved their names on the trees and the fields in Essex where some radio masts once stood. Really fascinating, surprising stuff. Here’s episode one (MP3), which is the one about the moon. You can hear the other three here for the next few days (the fourth episode’s Real stream jumps and skips a bit, beware).

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Inside The New Yorker

March 11th, 2008 by Steve Bowbrick

Last night I went to an interesting (well, frustrating really) event about the future of radio (Russell was there too but he passed through like a wraith) and, afterwards, in the bar, I met several very interesting people, including Adrian, who invented After Our Time, but has struggled to keep it going on his own (I reckon we need to mount some kind of rescue mission and chopper in some assistance from the Speechification community), Neil Gardner, whose excellent independent production company brought us Tom Mangold’s FBI series and his The Divine Detective, both featured here, and Naomi Gryn, who is really a proper celebrity and made a programme I really liked back in 2006 about The New Yorker (she wrote some words to go with it). So here [some sort of flourish or fanfare], from the archive, is that very programme: MP3.

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A Literary Landscape: James Joyce

February 13th, 2008 by Steve Bowbrick

Here’s a little Irish jewel from before the tiger roared. Professor Denis Donoghue, a Joyce scholar (now at NYU), reading a talk about the author recorded in 1984 (the series was repeated last Summer). There’s something precious about this: it’s a fascinating talk but it preserves the fustiness and melancholy of Ireland in the decades between independence and the arrival of all that European money in the eighties. Like a time capsule from Dev’s Ireland (MP3).

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Exploring The World Around Us

November 19th, 2007 by Russell Davies

Here’s a contribution very kindly sent to us by Mr Dan Hill:

ABC Radio National’s annual Boyer Lectures has been running for over 40 years now, and are essentially the Aussie equivalent of the BBC’s Reith Lectures. So the format is a respected public thinker given free rein to discuss ‘Big Ideas’, across a wide range social, scientific or cultural issues. Last year’s saw the former Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia explain macro-economics and the notion of stability. Lest that seem a little dry, the great writers Peter Conrad (2004) and David Malouf (1998) previously contributed two brilliant series on the Australian identity, for instance. And I’d pay good money to hear architect Robin Boyd’s 1967 series on ‘Artificial Australia’ dug out of the archives.

This year sees Professor Graeme Clark present a series on ‘Restoring The Senses’, which he describes as: “highlighting the importance of our senses, and how they can be restored with bionics.” Forget Steve Austin for a moment, for Clark was a key figure in the inventor of the actual bionic ear, and then the new field of ‘Medical Bionics’, which aims to develop bionic eyes too, as well as spinal cords and nerve systems for touch and movement.

In his first lecture, and perhaps given the almost unimaginable capabilities of the human sensory system, Professor Clark feels the need to frame what follows via a quick circuit of the complex history of entwined relationships between science and theology. He eventually makes his own position clear - a preference for a supernatural creator - and while I can’t personally reconcile that with science, it’s still an interesting set-up.

But moving on from the spirit world, the real joy of this is in hearing the charmingly avuncular Prof Clark talk about the incredible range of delicacy within the senses. It’s a subject I find fascinating, and particularly when he touches (o-ho) on the non-visual senses. It’s chock full of great factoids, like “the number of possible activation states of the brain is greater than the number of atoms in the universe”, or “the softest sound that we can hear moves the ear drum 1 billionth of one millimetre, or one-twentieth the size of a water molecule.” Learning that the eye can respond to a range of intensities from one to a mere 10 billion, compared to the one to one trillion for hearing, it It backs up my own belief that vision is overplayed today, in the league table of the senses. Check out the unheralded importance of the thumb too.

There’s way more he could go into here - further reading in Juhani Pallasmaa’s ‘The Eyes of the Skin’, Joy Monice Malnar & Frank Vodvarka’s ‘Sensory Design’ or Mirko Zardini’s ‘Sense of the City’ - and so far he doesn’t seem to be addressing contemporary research suggesting there are actually 17 senses. He’s only got 6 lectures to play with, after all. But we’ll see. Or hear, rather.

The MP3’s here.

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