Research English At Durham

Informações:

Sinopsis

READ gives you an insight into the groundbreaking literary research from Durham Universitys world-class Department of English Studies. Our podcasts feature lectures by our researchers, as well as poetry readings and author interviews.

Episodios

  • Liz Berry's Locations and Locutions

    07/08/2019 Duración: 26min

    The title of Liz Berry’s first, multi-award-winning poetry collection, Black Country, signals her place of birth - and unsurprisingly the book was described by reviewers as a ‘sooty, soaring hymn to her native West Midlands’. A more symbolic place is visited in her second pamphlet, The Republic of Motherhood, which maps the transformative experience of giving birth and raising her children. Suzannah V. Evans explored Liz Berry’s personal landscapes in conversation at the StAnza Poetry Festival.  For more information visit https://wp.me/p2iX9Z-7qL

  • Aurélia Lassaque on Poetry Across Languages

    25/07/2019 Duración: 23min

    Listen to Aurélia Lassaque, a French poet and performer who writes, sings, and speaks in French, English and Occitan – a language spoken in parts of Southern France, Northern Spain and Italy. In this podcast you’ll hear her different uses of voice as she reads and sings her work, and then an interview with Suzannah V. Evans in which they discuss the imaginative experience of writing poetry across multiple languages, and the relation between poetry, sound and music.  Find out more at https://wp.me/p2iX9Z-7qa

  • The Pleasures and Challenges of Contemporary Literature

    19/07/2019 Duración: 17min

    Meet Arya Thampuran and Katie Harling-Lee, two PhD researchers who have particular interests in contemporary fiction, and who have set up a new network to draw you into the conversation as well.   For more information visit https://wp.me/p2iX9Z-7qm   and https://modcondurham.wordpress.com/ 

  • Crash and Burn: A Poetry Reading in Memory of Michael O’Neill

    21/03/2019 Duración: 50min

    In December 2018 we lost our colleague, teacher and friend Professor Michael O’Neill. Just before he died, Michael had completed his fifth collection of poetry, Crash and Burn and so, at a poignant poetry reading, we were able to remember Michael by celebrating the launch of this posthumous new work, while also looking back at his earlier poetry and the poetry he cared for by other writers.  This podcast is an edited version of readings and reminiscences from Dr Sarah Wootton, the poet Jamie McKendrick, and Michael’s colleagues Professor Stephen Regan, Professor Jason Harding and Professor Mark Sandy.  For more details visit https://wp.me/p2iX9Z-7mR

  • Philosophy and Literature

    16/02/2019 Duración: 24min

    Are philosophy and literature two distinct disciplines, divided by a common language? Emphatically not, according to Michael Mack and Barry Stocker, editors of the new The Palgrave Handbook of Philosophy and Literature. In this podcast, we caught up with Michael and Barry to learn how the power of the imagination, literary uses of language, and an interest in ethics link the two approaches together.  For more information see http://readdurhamenglish.wordpress.com

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