Podcast appearances and mentions of Amanda Vickery

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Best podcasts about Amanda Vickery

Latest podcast episodes about Amanda Vickery

This Week
Gavin and Panel live from The Irish Embassy

This Week

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2022 7:22


Amanda Vickery is Professor of History at Queen Mary University of London and Michael Crick, a veteran broadcaster, journalist and author

This Week
More on the mourning of Queen Elizabeth the II

This Week

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2022 13:23


Gavin chats to Amanda Vickery is Professor of History at Queen Mary University of London and Michael Crick, a veteran broadcaster, journalist and author

History Film Club
Amanda Vickery - Why We're Obsessed With Jane Austen

History Film Club

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2021 33:32


Alex von Tunzelmann and Hannah Greig chat to Amanda Vickery about Colin Firth's erections, why we love the Georgians so much, and what vigorous dancing until 2am says about you.Produced & directed by: Natt Tapley for Gloaming Productions See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

jane austen georgian colin firth tunzelmann we're obsessed amanda vickery
History Film Club
History Film Club: The Trailer!

History Film Club

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2020 0:52


Here comes the first season of the History Film Club! Guests include: Stephen McGann, Amara Thornton, Dan Snow, Rebecca Rideal, Fara Dabhoiwala, Amanda Vickery, Greg Jenner, Amanda-Rae Prescott, Jamie Glazebrook, Lizzy Talbot, Grant Montgomery, & Priya Atwal. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast
Interview with Farah Mendlesohn - The Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast Episode 27

The Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2020 21:28


Interview with Farah Mendlesohn The Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast - Episode 27 with Heather Rose Jones A series of interviews with authors of historically-based fiction featuring queer women. In this episode we talk about: I chat with Farah Mendlesohn about her brand new lesbian Regency romance Spring Flowering. How did a literary theorist specializing in fantasy and science fiction come to write historic romance? Why was the 17th century a great time to set fiction about women loving women? How does historical fiction writer Geoffrey Trease come into things? How Spring Flowering came out of a challenge and a NaNoWriMo project. Books mentionedSpring Flowering by Farah Mendlesohn In These Times: Living in Britain Through Napoleon's Wars, 1793-1815 by Jenny Uglow Beulah Marie Dix (she wrote historical fiction in the early 20th century and was known to have relationships with women) Behind Closed Doors: At Home in Georgian England by Amanda Vickery (mentioned as “In the Georgian Household”) A Very Queer Family Indeed: Sex, Religion, and the Bensons in Victorian Britain by Simon Goldhill A transcript of this podcast may be available here. (Transcripts added when available.) Links to the Lesbian Historic Motif Project Online Website: http://alpennia.com/lhmp Blog: http://alpennia.com/blog RSS: http://alpennia.com/blog/feed/ Twitter: @LesbianMotif Discord: Contact Heather for an invitation to the Alpennia/LHMP Discord server The Lesbian Historic Motif Project Patreon Links to Heather Online Website: http://alpennia.com Email: Heather Rose Jones Twitter: @heatherosejones Facebook: Heather Rose Jones (author page) Links to Farah Mendlesohn Online Website: Farah Mendlesohn Twitter: @effjayem

Saturday Review
Joker, Mary Costello, A Day in the Death of Joe Egg, Dublin Murders, Into the Night: Cabarets and Clubs in Modern Art

Saturday Review

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2019 55:50


Joker: What was it about the new DC comic-based film which helped it to win the highest prize at this year's Venice Film Festival? Starring Joaquin Phoenix, it's a dark affair but is it deserving of the plaudits and prizes? Mary Costello's new novel "The River Capture" is set in rural Ireland where a young woman arrives and changes the life of those she meets A revival of A Day In The Death Of Joe Egg at London's Trafalgar Studios comes shortly after the death of its author Peter Nichols. Dublin Murders is an adaptation by Sarah Phelps of the Tana French novels for BBC TV A new exhibition at London's Barbican Centre - Into the Night: Cabarets and Clubs in Modern Art - spans the 1880s to the 1960s, celebrating the creativity of the spaces in which artists, performers, designers, musicians and writers congregated to push the boundaries of artistic expression. Tom Sutcliffe's guests are Alex Preston, Katy Puckrik and Amanda Vickery. The producer is Oliver Jones Podcast Extras: Katie: Twenty Thousand Hertz podcast Alex: The poetry of Mary Oliver Amanda: Unbelievable on Netflix Tom: Kara Walker at Tate Modern Main image: A Day in the Death of Joe Egg L-R Lucy Eaton, Claire Skinner, Storme Toolis, Patricia Hodge, Toby Stephens, Clarence Smith Photographer: Marc Brenner

TLT (The Lesbian Talkshow)
Episode 16b: Interview with Farah Mendlesohn

TLT (The Lesbian Talkshow)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2017 21:32


Interview with Farah Mendlesohn The Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast: Episode 16b A series of interviews with authors of historically-based fiction featuring queer women. In this episode we talk about I chat with Farah Mendlesohn about her brand new lesbian Regency romance Spring Flowering. How did a literary theorist specializing in fantasy and science fiction come to write historic romance? Why was the 17th century a great time to set fiction about women loving women? How does historical fiction writer Geoffrey Trease come into things? How Spring Flowering came out of a challenge and a NaNoWriMo project. Publications mentioned: Spring Flowering by Farah Mendlesohn (2017, Manifold Press) In These Times: Living in Britain Through Napoleon's Wars, 1793-1815 by Jenny Uglow Beulah Marie Dix (she wrote historical fiction in the early 20th century and was known to have relationships with women) Behind Closed Doors: At Home in Georgian England by Amanda Vickery (mentioned as “In the Georgian Household”) A Very Queer Family Indeed: Sex, Religion, and the Bensons in Victorian Britain by Simon Goldhill More info The Lesbian Historic Motif Project lives at: http://alpennia.com/lhmp Website: https://farahmendlesohn.com Twitter: @effjayem If you have questions or comments about the LHMP or these podcasts, send them to: contact@alpennia.com

Visions of Education
Episode 69: The Complexity of Citizenship for Black Women Social Studies Teachers w/ Amanda Vickery

Visions of Education

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2017 44:39


In episode 69, Michael and Dan chat with Amanda E. Vickery to discuss her recent Theory & Research in Social Studies article "'You excluded us for so long and now you want us to be patriotic?': African American Women Teachers Navigating the Quandary of Citizenship." Our conversation challenges the notion of what citizenship is and the many ways in which it can be taught.

Saturday Review
Hieronymus Bosch, OJ Simpson, North Water, A Bigger Splash, Battlefield

Saturday Review

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2016 42:04


The biggest Hieronymus Bosch exhibition ever has just opened in Holland. 500 years after his death, Noordbrabants Museum has gathered together the largest collection of his bizarre, extraordinary work OJ Simpson's 1994 trial has been turned into a US TV drama. Does it have something new to show or say? Ian McGuire's North Water has garnered positive reviews from the likes of Hilary Mantel and Martin Amis. It's a whodunnit set on board an 18th century whaling ship. "A version of Captain Ahab (if you squint a little) meets a version of Sherlock Holmes" Ralph Fiennes stars in A Bigger Splash, a tale of louche life set around a swimming pool in a baking hot Italian villa. Also starring Tilda Swinton, Matthius Schoenaerts and Dakota Johnson Battlefield at The Young Vic is Peter Brook's distillation of his magnum opus Mahabarata. A few short tales which deal with life an immense canvas in miniature Tom Sutcliffe is joined by Amanda Vickery, Natalie Haynes and Jim White. The producer is Oliver Jones.

Start the Week
Russia: Tsars to Putin

Start the Week

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2016 41:57


On Start the Week Andrew Marr looks at Russia from the heyday of the Soviet Empire to its transformation under Putin. The historian Simon Sebag Montefiore writes about the Romanovs, the most successful dynasty of modern times, while Amanda Vickery highlights a moment of defiance and triumph during WW2's siege of Leningrad. The journalist Arkady Ostrovsky charts the huge changes that have taken place, from Perestroika to corporate state. And David Aaronovitch explores the emotional pull of communism in Britain through the story of his family and their ties to The Party. Producer: Katy Hickman.

World War One
The War that Changed the World: Part Two

World War One

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2014 50:02


The tank, gas, flame throwers, Zeppelins - the weapons of World War One were like nothing that had been experienced before. At a special event with the British Council, Amanda Vickery and her guests explore the waging of war, its methods and morality, at the German Military Museum in Dresden.

Front Row: Archive 2014
Roger Graef, Belle reviewed; The art of Dazzle Ships

Front Row: Archive 2014

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2014 28:32


Historian and broadcaster Amanda Vickery gives her verdict on the film Belle, set in the eighteenth century, which tells the true story of the illegitimate daughter of a British naval officer and a slave, who was brought up by her great uncle in Georgian London. Bafta award-winner Roger Graef has been making documentaries for fifty years. A pioneer of "fly-on-the-wall" formats and films made in closed institutions such as prisons, police stations and government ministries, Roger has just been given a Lifetime Achievement Award at the Sheffield DocFest. He joins Kirsty to discuss his work - and to give his predictions for the future of documentary-making. Dazzle Ships were used in the First World War to confuse the enemy. A variety of British ships were painted in bright, colourful patterns to disorientate and confuse German sailors trying to judge the vessels' speed and direction. As two new Dazzle Ships are created in the UK, Front Row hears from the project curator and a naval historian. Tom Rachman's first novel, The Imperfectionists, about a failing newspaper received rave reviews. His second novel The Rise & Fall of Great Powers, starts off in failing bookshop. He talks to Kirsty about why he thinks books, if not newspapers, will survive the digital future. Kirsty Lang - Presenter Nicola Holloway - producer.

The Essay
Amanda Vickery on Elizabeth Parker Shackleton

The Essay

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2014 14:02


In today's essay shedding light on key figures of the Georgian era, historian Amanda Vickery explores the life of gentlewoman Elizabeth Parker Shackleton, member of the lesser gentry and mercantile elite of 18th-century Lancashire.Producer: Mohini Patel.

The Essay
Claire Tomalin on Dora Jordan

The Essay

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2014 11:59


In the first essay of the week, shedding light on key figures of the Georgian era, biographer Claire Tomalin explores the life of Dora Jordan, the greatest comic actress of her day and renowned for being lover to the future king.The rest of the essays in this series are by the actor and writer Ian Kelly on actor, playwright, and theatre manager David Garrick; historian Amanda Vickery on Lancashire gentlewoman Elizabeth Parker Shackleton; writer and cartoonist Martin Rowson on Hogarth and historian Dan Cruikshank on architect Robert Adam.Producer: Mohini Patel.

georgian lancashire hogarth ian kelly claire tomalin david garrick martin rowson amanda vickery
Front Row: Archive 2014
Kylie Minogue; V&A: William Kent; Jack O'Connell on Starred Up

Front Row: Archive 2014

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2014 28:39


With John Wilson. Kylie Minogue has achieved record sales of around 70 million, and received multiple awards including a Grammy. She discusses 26 years in the music industry, her new album Kiss Me Once - which features collaborations with artists including Pharrell Williams, and the possibility of Kylie The Musical. William Kent was an 18th century polymath, an architect, designer, sculptor, artist and landscape gardener. In the years after the act of union with Scotland (1707) and the accession of the Hanoverian Royal Family (1714) Britain redefined itself as a new nation - and Kent played a dominant role in the aesthetic of the Georgian era. A new exhibition at the V&A examines Kent's life and works, demonstrating his transformative effect on the nation's taste - from Whitehall (he designed Horse Guards and the Treasury), to grand country estates, fashion and furniture. Amanda Vickery reviews. "Starred up" is the process by which difficult young offenders are moved early to adult prisons. Writer and former prison counsellor Jonathan Asser, and actor Jack O'Connell, talk to John about the film, Starred Up - which Jonathan has written and which stars Jack as Eric, a troubled young prisoner who finds himself moved into the same prison as his own father. When the old Parliament building burned down in 1834, JMW Turner was one of those who went to watch. He produced two oil paintings and a series of watercolour sketches - or so everyone thought. However, new research has revealed that the watercolour sketches are actually of a fire at the Tower Of London, instead. John visits Tate Britain, where David Brown, Turner Curator, explains how this news will change things. Producer: Claire Bartleet.

Disability: A New History
Wooden Legs and Wheelchairs

Disability: A New History

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2013 13:47


Peter White has a close encounter with a huge wooden leg, and asks who got access to new technology in the 19th century. Strangely, wooden legs were thought to be sexy in the 19th century. During the 22 years of war with France, tens of thousands of British soldiers and sailors gave their lives for their country. Surviving, with a missing limb, became tangible proof of valour - and virility. However, the reality of life with a wooden leg was anything but romantic. Peter White discovers an extraordinary account written by a 19th century soldier, Thomas Jackson, who lost his leg in battle: "Military surgeons are not very nice about hurting one. What with the tearing off of the bandages, and the opening of the wound afresh, and the tying of the ligaments of the arteries, I fear in my feeble strength I must have sunk under the excruciating pain. When fitted on, my wooden leg was strapped by the knee. I looked down with the same kind of satisfaction which a dog does when he gets a tin kettle tied to his tail." But William Jackson was one of the lucky ones. As a military man, he had access to the latest technology. Disabled women were not so lucky - and could be confined to the house, unable to leave their bedroom. Two case studies - one soldier, one genteel woman in Bath - reveal how expectations of mobility were limited by gender. And how crucial it was to have individual ambition. With historians Julie Anderson, Caroline Nielsen, and Amanda Vickery. Producer: Elizabeth Burke Academic adviser: David Turner of Swansea University A Loftus production for BBC Radio 4.

Arts & Ideas
Night Waves - Napoleon Rising

Arts & Ideas

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2012 45:06


Critic Kevin Jackson and Andrew Biswell join Samira Ahmed to review Napoleon Rising, a play by Anthony Burgess, ahead of its world premiere on Radio 3 on 2nd December. Samira will also be weighing up the latest film adaptation of Great Expectations with its screenwriter, David Nicholls. Designer Tom Dixon and historian Amanda Vickery review the V&A Museum's new furniture wing. And writer and journalist James Buchan and Azar Nafisi reflect on the legacy of the 1979 Iranian revolution.

Midweek
21/12/2011

Midweek

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2011 41:59


This week Libby Purves is joined by Alistair Sutcliffe, Martha Fiennes, Celia Imrie and Amanda Vickery. Alistair Sutcliffe is a GP who became the first man to summit the highest mountain on each of the seven continents at the first attempt. He subsequently suffered a near fatal brain haemorrhage, and he describes his recovery as the most difficult climb of all in his book 'The Hardest Climb', published by Blue Moose. Martha Fiennes is a filmmaker, whose films include Onegin and Chromophobia. She also directs television commercials. For her latest project she has created her first digital installation, Nativity, a completely self-generating technological art-work based on the Christmas Nativity scene, on display in a specially constructed chalet in London's Covent Garden piazza. Celia Imrie plays Dotty Otley who plays Mrs Clackett, in Michael Frayn's 'Noises Off' at the Old Vic. She is perhaps best known for her regular characters in the award-winning TV series Acorn Antiques and Dinnerladies. Her many screen credits include Calendar Girls, Hilary and Jackie, and Aunt Una Alconbury in the Bridget Jones films and she will soon be seen on the big screen in The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel. Amanda Vickery is the historian, writer and broadcaster and Professor of Early Modern History at Queen Mary College, University of London. She presents a BBC Two documentary 'The Many Lovers of Miss Jane Austen' to mark the 200th anniversary of the publication of Sense and Sensibility, Jane Austen's first novel. She explores her enduring popularity through her plots and characters. Producer: Lucinda Montefiore.

Thinking Allowed
08/06/2011

Thinking Allowed

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2011 27:47


Dirt is dust, soil, refuse, excrement, bacteria, filth, sleaze, slime, smut. How easily the word changes its meaning from the physical to the moral. It is this fascinating relationship and threat which dirt seems to pose that is explored in the Wellcome Collection's exhibition 'Dirt: The Filthy Reality of Everyday Life'.In a special edition recorded with an audience of the public at Wellcome, Laurie Taylor and a panel of experts explore the meaning of dirt, its relationship to order and how hygiene and the mass generation of dirt have become such potent symbols of civilisation.He is joined by the anthropologist Adam Kuper, the writer and cartoonist Martin Rowson and the historian Amanda Vickery to discuss dirt and why it provokes such fear, loathing and occasionally desire.Producer: Charlie Taylor.

dirt everyday life wellcome wellcome collection martin rowson amanda vickery laurie taylor adam kuper
Podularity Books Podcast
33. Through the Georgian keyhole

Podularity Books Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2009


Amanda Vickery on the impression of Georgian life given by National Trust properties today: “They’re absolutely empty of life. They’re neat and tidy and they don’t smell and there’s no noise of the household. All of those things are absolutely central to what it was like to live in even quite grand eighteenth-century houses. “Women’s letters are full of complaints about how awful it is, how freezing, the stiff-backed ceremony, people coming in, a lack of privacy…” This week’s podcast, sponsored by Blackwell Online, features an in-depth interview with Amanda Vickery, whose Behind Closed Doors has just been published by Yale University Press. In the interview we talk about what home meant to the Georgians, both physically and psychologically. Amanda is fascinating on what a detail of domestic interiors as apparently insignificant as wallpaper can tell you about the taste, status and outlook of a household. For those with money, it was a period which saw the dawning of the age of  the commercialization of home and simultaneously the feminization of it. While for those …

History Extra podcast
History Extra podcast - October 2009 - Part 1

History Extra podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2009 25:08


Amanda Vickery talks about her new radio series that delves into the history of private lives in Britain. Also in this edition Ian Mortimer explains why he thinks Henry V was a cruel king who doesn’t deserve his heroic reputation. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

In Our Time
Tea

In Our Time

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2004 28:13


Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss tea, the first truly global commodity. After air and water, tea is the most widely consumed substance on the planet and the British national drink. In this country it helped define class and gender, it funded wars and propped up the economy of the Empire. The trade started in the 1660s with an official import of just 2 ounces, by 1801 24 million pounds of tea were coming in every year and people of all classes were drinking an average two cups a day. It was the first mass commodity, and the merchant philanthropist Jonas Hanway decried its hold on the nation, “your servants' servants, down to the very beggars, will not be satisfied unless they consume the produce of the remote country of China”.What drove the extraordinary take up of tea in this country? What role did it play in the global economy of the Empire and at what point did it stop becoming an exotic foreign luxury and start to define the essence of Englishness?With Huw Bowen, Senior Lecturer in Economic and Social History at the University of Leicester; James Walvin, Professor of History at the University of York; Amanda Vickery, Reader in History at Royal Holloway, University of London.

In Our Time: History

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss tea, the first truly global commodity. After air and water, tea is the most widely consumed substance on the planet and the British national drink. In this country it helped define class and gender, it funded wars and propped up the economy of the Empire. The trade started in the 1660s with an official import of just 2 ounces, by 1801 24 million pounds of tea were coming in every year and people of all classes were drinking an average two cups a day. It was the first mass commodity, and the merchant philanthropist Jonas Hanway decried its hold on the nation, “your servants' servants, down to the very beggars, will not be satisfied unless they consume the produce of the remote country of China”.What drove the extraordinary take up of tea in this country? What role did it play in the global economy of the Empire and at what point did it stop becoming an exotic foreign luxury and start to define the essence of Englishness?With Huw Bowen, Senior Lecturer in Economic and Social History at the University of Leicester; James Walvin, Professor of History at the University of York; Amanda Vickery, Reader in History at Royal Holloway, University of London.