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Charlotte Corday is a notorious figure from the French Revolution, best known for assassinating Jean-Paul Marat. Who was she, why did she do this, what art was inspired by her act, was she the Luigi of her time, and must we stan?? Special guest Gavin Whitehead from The Art of Crime podcast joins us to talk about the ribbons of it all. — Sign up for the Vulgar History mailing list! — Get 15% off all the gorgeous jewellery and accessories at common.era.com/vulgar or go to commonera.com and use code VULGAR at checkout — Get Vulgar History merch at vulgarhistory.com/store (best for US shipping) and vulgarhistory.redbubble.com (better for international shipping) — Support Vulgar History on Patreon — Vulgar History is an affiliate of Bookshop.org, which means that a small percentage of any books you click through and purchase will come back to Vulgar History as a commission. Use this link to shop there and support Vulgar History. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Äntligen ska vi prata om 1700-talet igen, nämligen Jacques-Louis Davids ikoniska målning “Marats död” från 1793, som finns på Kungliga museet för sköna konster i Belgien och i en kopia från 1800 på Louvren. Davids tavla visar den döende tidningsmannen, revolutionären och politikern Jean Paul Marat och det är en vacker och stillsam död vi får se här. Inget får en att ana den rafflande och våldsamma historiska berättelsen som ligger bakom motivet. Målningen härstammar direkt från den franska revolutionens epicentrum. Målaren David och motivet Marat var inte bara vänner, utan båda politiskt aktiva i Nationalkonventet under den franska revolutionen. Medan Marat inte överlevde revolutionen, kunde David med nöd och näppe undgå giljotinen. Nuförtiden räknas konstverket till ett av de viktigaste i den franska konsthistorien, men då det begav sig fanns ingen plats för den i Frankrike. Konstnären själv fick rädda undan tavlan, gömma den i flera år och ta med sig den till sitt exil i Belgien, där den finns än idag. Jacques-Louis David är en av de viktigaste målarna i den franska konsthistorien, men när han gick bort, nekades han till och med att bli begravd i Paris. Bara hans hjärta ligger begravd på Père-Lachaise i Paris. Support till showen http://supporter.acast.com/konsthistoriepodden. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
With the prisons full of suspected counter-revolutionaries, the radical journalist and politician Jean-Paul Marat urged the citizens of Paris to take up arms and eliminate these ‘enemies of the ...
Murder in the bathtub! Explore the most famous assassination of the French Revolution! From the motives of Charlotte Corday to the legacy of Jean-Paul Marat, this episode leaves unpacks it all! Bonus Content 1.75.1 The Cult of Marat A new Jesus?! Explore the crazy developments of the Cult of Marat! Early Access Don't wait! Support the show and listen to Episode 76 "The Battle for the Sans-Culottes Part I" now! Available for all True Revolutionaries and above! The Grey History Community Help keep Grey History on the air! Every revolution needs its supporters, and we need you! With an ad-free feed, a community discord, a reading club, and tonnes of exclusive bonus content, you're missing out! Do your part for as little as half a cup of coffee per episode! It's the best value on the internet, with the best people too! Join Now And Support the Show Make a one-off donation Contact Me Send your questions, praise, and scorn here Newsletter Sign Up for Free Bonus Episode Follow on Social Media: Facebook Instagram X Advertising Please contact sales@advertisecast.com if you would like to advertise on Grey History: The French Revolution and Napoleon. All members of the Grey History Community have an ad-free version of the show. Support the show here. About Grey History: The French Revolution and Napoleon is a podcast dedicated to exploring the complexities of our history. By examining both the experiences of contemporaries and the conclusions of historians, Grey History seeks to unpack the ambiguities and nuances of the past. Understanding the French Revolution and the age of Napoleon Bonaparte is critical to understanding the history of the world, so join us on a journey through a series of events that would be almost unbelievable if it weren't for the fact that it's true! If you're looking for a binge-worthy history podcast on the Revolution and Napoleon, you're in the right place! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Charlotte Corday est connue pour avoir assassiné le révolutionnaire Jean-Paul Marat, dans son bain, espérant ainsi mettre fin à la Terreur. Comment une jeune aristocrate frêle et romantique a pu fomenter seule le meurtre d'un des révolutionnaires préférés des Sans-Culotte ? Dans un récit inédit, Virginie Girod retrace l'itinéraire stupéfiant de Charlotte Corday ! Marie-Anne-Charlotte de Corday d'Armont, est née en 1768 dans la noblesse désargentée du Calvados, la fierté d'appartenir à une grande famille chevillée au corps. Elle compte parmi ses ancêtres Corneille, l'un des plus grands dramaturges français ! Lorsque la Révolution française éclate, la jeune normande est déjà éprise de liberté, sensible à l'idée de justice et d'égalité. A Caen, le peuple affamé imite la prise de la Bastille en partant à l'assaut du château de vieille ville où sont stockées des provisions. Le vicomte de Belsunce, son commandant, est mis en pièce. Républicaine modérée, Charlotte Corday est indignée par ce massacre. Elle est sensible aux idées des Girondins, les opposants des Montagnards, l'aile gauche de l'Assemblée. Ces derniers sont les artisans de la Terreur, ils ne cessent de demander des têtes. Charlotte assiste aux massacres qui se déroulent à Caen lors de parodies de justice. À Paris, la condamnation à mort du roi, bien qu'elle l'ait toujours tenu en piètre estime, la révulse. Ces idéaux vacillent. Faut-il continuer à croire en cette République tenue par des bourreaux ? Thèmes abordés : Révolution française, Montagne, Girondins, Terreur "Au cœur de l'histoire" est un podcast Europe 1 Studio- Présentatrice : Virginie Girod - Production : Caroline Garnier- Réalisation : Nicolas Gaspard- Direction artistique : Julien Tharaud- Composition de la musique originale : Julien Tharaud et Sébastien Guidis- Edition et Diffusion : Nathan Laporte- Promotion et Coordination des partenariats : Marie Corpet- Visuel : Sidonie Mangin Biographie :Jean et Marie-José Tulard, Les égéries de la Révolution, Robert Laffont, 2019. Découvrez l'abonnement "Au Coeur de l'Histoire +" et accédez à des heures de programmes, des archives inédites, des épisodes en avant-première et une sélection d'épisodes sur des grandes thématiques. Profitez de cette offre sur Apple Podcasts dès aujourd'hui !
O assassinato de Jean-Paul Marat foi sem dúvidas um dos mais famosos da história. Ele foi um revolucionário jacobino bastante atuante durante a Revolução Francesa, e foi assassinado em sua banheira por Charlotte Corday. Agora, o que poucos sabem, é que esse assassinato atravessou gerações e chegou até o maior pintor da Noruega: Edvard Munch, o autor do O Grito. Ele fez uma releitura da obra mudando alguns elementos por fatos pessoais seus. Nesse episódio eu te conto tudo sobre o assassinato de Marat, a obra de Munch (Death of Marat II) e a minha visita ao Museu do Munch, em Oslo, na Noruega. Para contato, parcerias e sugestões você pode entrar em contato por: E-mail: passaporteprocrime@gmail.com Instagram: @andressaisfer TikTok: @andressaisfer Ouça e apoie o Passaporte pro Crime na Orelo: orelo.cc/passaporteprocrime
Per celebrare questa Festa Internazionale delle Donne 2024, SB Radio vi fa conoscere una vera e propria Rivoluzionaria, Charlotte Corday:"Era una calda notte d'estate nel luglio 1793. Piena Rivoluzione Francese. Viene ritrovato un cadavere: ci troviamo nel quartiere di Montmartre, Parigi. Si tratta di Jean Paul Marat, cinquant'anni, noto giornalista e attivista francese, colonna portante della Revolution, “amico del popolo”. Ritrovato morente nella vasca da bagno del suo appartamento, Marat era ancora intento a scrivere per il suo giornale..."Canzoni vivaci come La vasca di Alex Britti e gli ultimi successi sanremesi come "Vai!" di Alfa... E dall'Erasmus Plus ai microfoni della nostra SB Web Radio intervista incrociata a Madame Céline et Madame Alice, du Lycée de Brive, France: evviva Charlotte, attivista rivoluzionaria, come tutte noi Ragazze Savoia Benincasa
As the French Revolution ran its course, the monarchy crumbled, and the nation descended into wanton violence. During the Reign of Terror, thousands of French citizens went to the guillotine, and Tussaud made waxen replicas of important revolutionaries' severed heads, including that of Maximilien Robespierre. In 1793, she also created a wax tableau inspired by perhaps the most notorious crime of this period: the assassination of Jean-Paul Marat. Show notes and full transcripts available at www.artofcrimepodcast.com. If you'd like to support the show, please consider becoming a patron at www.patreon.com/artofcrimepodcast. The Art of Crime is part of the Airwave Media network. To learn more about Airwave, visit www.airwavemedia.com. If you'd like to advertise on The Art of Crime, please email advertising@airwavemedia.com.
Aquesta setmana opinem que els dos millors personatges han sigut en Jeffrey Hudson, en Lord Minimus, un cavaller de la cort anglesa que no aixecava un pam de terra per
Aquesta setmana opinem que els dos millors personatges han sigut en Jeffrey Hudson, en Lord Minimus, un cavaller de la cort anglesa que no aixecava un pam de terra per
Programa 4x86. Hem for
Programa 4x86. Hem for
durée : 00:50:21 - Autant en emporte l'Histoire - par : Stéphanie Duncan, Emmanuelle Fournier - L'image, immortalisée par le peintre David, est célébrissime : Le député jacobin, Jean-Paul Marat, la tête enturbannée, agonisant nu dans sa baignoire, après le coup de poignard fatal que vient de lui asséner Charlotte Corday... - réalisé par : Anne WEINFELD
Programa 4x23. Nosaltres us presentem els fets i vosaltres trieu si sou m
Programa 4x23. Nosaltres us presentem els fets i vosaltres trieu si sou m
Le 13 juillet 1793, Marie Anne Charlotte de Corday dʹArmont, 24 ans, assassinait lʹami du peuple Jean-Paul Marat. Quatre jours plus tard, le 17 juillet, elle était guillotinée. A lʹoccasion du 230e anniversaire de lʹexécution de Charlotte Corday, Vertigo revient sur son parcours et lʹassassinat de Jean-Paul Marat, dans un livre, et un spectacle. "De la main d'une femme - Charlotte Corday, une femme en quête de liberté", Astrid de Laage, paru aux éditions Grasset. Né à Boudry, le révolutionnaire neuchâtelois Jean-Paul Marat fait lʹobjet dʹune pièce "Citoyen Marat ou lʹinfortuné destin de lʹami du peuple" écrite et mise en... en rue, par le neuchâtelois Mathieu Béguelin. Spectacle à voir les 4 et 5 août 2023 au Festival La Plage des Six-Pompes à La Chaux-de-Fonds et les 23 au 26 août 2023 au Festival Éclats à Aurillac en France. Astrid de Laage et Matthieu Béguelin sont les invité.es dʹAnne Laure Gannac.
This is the fifth in a series of five episodes regarding the French Revolution. This episode looks at the battle of the factions which facilitated the rise of Maximillian Robespierre before he then implemented his 'reign of terror.' The episode will end with the fall of Robespierre and the rise of the Directory. Side topics include the execution of Marie Antoinette, the murder of Jean-Paul Marat, and what determines whether you are a conservative or liberal. Contact the show at resourcesbylowery@gmail.com If you would like to financially support the show, please use the following paypal link. Or remit PayPal payment to @Lowery80 Any support is greatly appreciated and will be used to make future episodes of the show even better. Expect new shows to drop on Wednesday morning except for during the Winter Break period and Summer. Music is licensed through Epidemic Sound
Op 13 juli 1793 wordt Jean Paul Marat vermoord in zijn bad. De dader is Charlotte Corday, een jonge vrouw van girondijnse strekking. Haar actie is het culminatiepunt van de machtsstrijd die zich de maanden voordien heeft afgespeeld in de revolutionaire rangen en met name die tussen de montagnards en de girondijnen. De strijd zal uiteindelijk beslecht worden door Robespierre. Op zijn bevel worden op 31 oktober, 21 girondijnen onthoofd onder de guillotine.
Begin 1793. De koning is niet meer! Maar wat nu? Voor Jean-Paul Marat, een communist avant la lettre en officieel voorzitter van de Jakobijnen, is het nog lang niet genoeg. In zijn krant ‘L'Ami du Peuple' pleit hij in opruiende taal voor een radicale sociale omwenteling, met de vuisten op straat als het moet. Hij wordt gearresteerd wegens het oproepen tot geweld tegen de verraders van de regering en de Conventie, maar zijn proces loopt anders dan verwacht.
The year is 1768! Philip Astley brings the first circus to town, the Anglo-Irish novelist Maria Edgeworth is born, Jean-Paul Marat learns why it's not a good idea to take meetings while in the bathtub, and Steller's Sea Cow just...just be nice to animals, y'all. ******* Intro Music: "Horse Race" by EstherGarcia. Used with purchased license. http://www.circopedia.org/Philip_Astley https://www.britannica.com/art/circus-theatrical-entertainment/Philip-Astley-and-the-first-circuses http://www.historyofcircus.com/circus-origin/philip-astley/ https://www.philipastley.org.uk/ https://www.historyhit.com/who-was-philip-astley-the-father-of-the-modern-british-circus/ https://www.britannica.com/biography/Jean-Paul-Marat https://guides.loc.gov/women-in-the-french-revolution/charlotte-corday https://www.historyhit.com/the-angel-of-assassination-who-was-charlotte-corday/ https://www.britannica.com/biography/Maria-Edgeworth https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/books/maria-edgeworth-was-a-great-literary-celeb-why-has-she-been-forgotten-1.3760188 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/geb.13370 https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/naturalist-georg-wilhelm-steller https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2017/04/pleistoseacow/522831/ https://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/1036/report.pdf https://www.ashoka.edu.in/static/doc_uploads/file_1615554314.pdf#page=31
Dawn usually records around her kitchen table, but as guest, Kristal Adams, recently had her cars stolen, she instead packed up the recording equipment and headed to Kristal's place near downtown Los Angeles. As it turns out, the quietest and most comfortable place to record was smack in the middle of Kristals bed. Tres bien. 00:03:55 - Dawn goes through Kristal's most exciting credits including as a writer on Legomasters, and The Circle on Netflix, and she promotes her hilarious comedy album Aint I A Wombat. 00:05:12 - Kristal explains to Dawn that her lack of car has been part of the decision to move to New York City - where you don't need one! Dawn likes the idea but gives her some food for thought as she heads into living in her first 'winter climate' state. 00:09:42 - We learn a little bit more about Kristal's French husband, Fabrice, and how he has spurred both her interest in French Literature and her desire to ask ANYONE BUT HIM to tell her about it. Voila! Moi! Dawn explains that since 'French Literature' is such a huge subject, she focused her attention on The Three Musketeers and it's author Alexander Dumas... but of course it all begins with The French Revolution. 00:12:46 - The French Revolution has to precede any in-depth conversation about French Literature because for so much of our most-loved figures it was a central event. From Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, through the Reign of Terror and past the execution of Robespierre - we give Kristal a lot to chew on around the ol' Fromage Tray. 00:22:52 - Lots of sources generally say the French Revolution ended with the execution of Robespierre in 1794 but in fact there were several more revolutions and, of course, the Emperor Napoleon. 00:30:00 - With some general French History and some specific French Revolution History in our back pocket, we move on to the author of The Three Musketeers, Alexander Dumas... well, we begin with his grandparents actually: A rich white nobleman living in Haiti and an enslaved woman, named Marie-Cesette. Alexander Duma's half-black father has a incredible story of his own - one that led him to glory fighting for France aboard during the Revolution, and earned the ire of none other than Napoleon.00:37:04 - Always feeling in the shadow of his father's greatness, and enduring the rampant racism in Paris himself, Alexander Dumas strived always to be remembered and be loved. Perhaps this is why he had no less than 4 illegitimate children and an estimated 40 mistresses. He attained some fame and wealth -experimented with drugs in a very interesting club with Victor Hugo among others - but ultimately died rather poor in the care of his son. --BREAK--Listen to HIGHTAILING THROUGH HISTORY hosted by Laurel and KT00:41:56 - After the break, we welcome into bed with us The Three Musketeers, D'Artagnan and you, of course - with a quick summary of the swashbuckling tale that has stood the test of time and had some good (and bad) movie versions over the years. 00:55:24 - As the original subject that Kristal assigned Dawn was 'French Literature' they wrap up the conversation with a couple of quick booty calls - one on Victor Hugo, author of Les Miserables. It turns out that the musical had a rather outsized impact on both Kristal and Dawn's youth. 00:59:25 - Dawn wraps up with a tip of the hat to The Marquis de Sade, the man from whom we get the phrase 'sadist' and oh so much more. 01:03:22 - Before extracting herself from Kristal's marital sheets, Dawn leaves her with one last story from the French Revolution - that of the assassination of the bathtub-bound invalid, Jean-Paul Marat at the hands of Charlotte Corday. Not only is it a bloody and interesting story, but it is the inspiration for a play written in the 1970's called: The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade. I know, right?---Our themesong was composed and performed by (legendary) Kat Perkins @katperkinsmusic. If you want to reach out to HILF, please do! We are on social media @HILFPODCAST, or @DAWN_BRODEY or you can email us hilfpodcast@gmail.com.
Charlotte Corday (1768-1793) was the assassin of French revolutionary Jean-Paul Marat.In honor of the spookiest month, we're revisiting our favorite Womanica episodes featuring villains, troublemakers, magic, and mystery all October. Join host Jenny Kaplan — with a few special introductions — as she takes you back in time, highlighting women like Sadie the Goat, Marie Laveau, Patricia Krenwinkel and more who were ruthless, vengeful, and mystical. The riveting stories of these women are sure to keep you up at night.History classes can get a bad rap, and sometimes for good reason. When we were students, we couldn't help wondering... where were all the ladies at? Why were so many incredible stories missing from the typical curriculum? Enter, Womanica. On this Wonder Media Network podcast we explore the lives of inspiring women in history you may not know about, but definitely should.Every weekday, listeners explore the trials, tragedies, and triumphs of groundbreaking women throughout history who have dramatically shaped the world around us. In each 5 minute episode, we'll dive into the story behind one woman listeners may or may not know–but definitely should. These diverse women from across space and time are grouped into easily accessible and engaging monthly themes like Educators, Villains, Indigenous Storytellers, Activists, and many more. Womanica is hosted by WMN co-founder and award-winning journalist Jenny Kaplan. The bite-sized episodes pack painstakingly researched content into fun, entertaining, and addictive daily adventures. Womanica was created by Liz Kaplan and Jenny Kaplan, executive produced by Jenny Kaplan, and produced by Liz Smith, Grace Lynch, Maddy Foley, Brittany Martinez, Edie Allard, Lindsey Kratochwill, Adesuwa Agbonile, Carmen Borca-Carrillo, Taylor Williamson, Ale Tejeda, Sara Schleede, and Alex Jhamb Burns. Special thanks to Shira Atkins. Original theme music composed by Miles Moran.Follow Wonder Media Network:WebsiteInstagramTwitter
Alexander talks about the importance of Jean Paul Marat and his writings, including his newspaper (L'Ami du Peuple) to the French Revolution.
Its 1793 and the French Revolution is in full swing. Famed political journalist Jean-Paul Marat, a voice for those who want rid of the excesses of the monarchy, is taking a meeting in his bathroom. He has a debilitating skin condition and the bath is the only place where he can find relief. It's there that the twenty-four year old Charlotte Corday finds him, claiming she has information about his political opponents but instead plunging a knife into Marat's chest, ending the life of one of the most vocal anti-royalists of his time.Crosshairs is a podcast from What's The Story - the leaders in premium true-crime content.For ad-free listening to this series - sign up to Crime Corner - brought to you by What's The Story.Crime Corner is your home for brilliant true-crime story-telling. Subscribers can get early access to new series of Crosshairs, with all episodes from every series completely ad-free.PLUS - your subscription helps to ensure we can keep bringing the show back season after season.AND - there's a collection of other shows which you can only find on Crime Corner - all designed for fans of Crosshairs.Signing up to Crime Corner is quick and simple.If you're listening on Apple Podcasts, just search for the Crime Corner Channel, sign up, and all the exclusive content will be in your Apple Podcasts app.If you're listening on Spotify, Amazon, Castbox, Pocketcasts, or any other player - you can sign up directly here : CRIME CORNERWith a couple of clicks, you'll receive all the exclusive content in your chosen platform. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Mes chers camarades, bien le bonjour !Aujourd'hui on continue votre série favorite des morts absurdes, étranges, ridicules, en abordant… la salle de bain. Les personnages historiques que vous allez découvrir (ou redécouvrir) partagent un point commun : ils sont tous morts dans leur baignoire ! Ah si, deuxième point commun : on les a tous assassinés ! On s'attarde cette fois ci sur le cas de Jean-Paul Marat.Bonne écoute ! Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/notabenemovies. Notre politique de confidentialité GDPR a été mise à jour le 8 août 2022. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Stella joins Breht to discuss (and put a unique communist spin) on the great French Revolution! Together, they discuss the conditions that led to the revolution, the major events and figures of the Revolution, the importance of mass mobilization for any authentic revolution, the so-called Reign of Terror, Maximilien Robespierre, Jean-Paul Marat, the Guillotine, the role of women, Babeuf and the Conspiracy of Equals, the Thermidorian Reaction and the end of the Revolution, the response to the Rev by the rest of monarchical Europe, and why communists today should value this bourgeois revolution and even see it as a part of our egalitarian and revolutionary tradition! Clips included in this episode are from TDC - The World History Documentaries 'The French Revolution': https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R9RJz8LLhZQ Outro music "The Guillotine" by The Coup Support Rev Left Radio: https://www.patreon.com/RevLeftRadio
O jornalista radical e político da Revolução Francesa foi assassinado na banheira faz hoje 229 anos.
Peter Brook and Richard Wolinsky. Peter Brook (1925-2022), visionary director, in conversation with Richard Wolinsky. Peter Brook was one of the greatest theatrical directors of the twentieth century. Artistic director of the Royal Shakespeare Company for twenty years from 1962-1982, he transformed how the English speaking world looked at the plays of William Shakespeare. He is perhaps best known, during those years, for his production of “The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade,” also known as “Marat/Sade,” which later became a film and turned Glenda Jackson into an international star. His other films include “Lord of the Flies,” “Meetings with Remarkable Men” and a version of “King Lear” starring Paul Scofield. His 1985 nine-hour adaptation of the Indian epic Mahabharata is probably his masterpiece. At the age of 92, he and his collaborator Marie Helene Estienne went back to the Mahabharata with a short theatrical piece, “Battlefield,” which played at ACT's Geary Theater in May, 2017. This interview was recorded on April 24, 2017 in a rehearsal studio in the ACT offices in San Francisco. Included in the podcast is a brief commentary on Peter Brook by actor and director Simon McBurney. Peter Brook Wikipedia page The post Peter Brook (1925-2022), legendary director, “Battlefield,” 2017 appeared first on KPFA.
Mes chers camarades, bien le bonjour et bienvenue dans ce nouvel entretien historique en compagnie d'Olivier Coquard, historien, agrégé d'histoire et prof au lycée Henri IV à Paris. Il a rédigé sa thèse sur le révolutionnaire Jean-Paul Marat et a ensuite publié plusieurs ouvrages sur la révolution. Aujourd'hui, je vous propose d'aborder les révolutionnaires, leurs réseaux et leurs parcours, avec bien sûr une attention particulière pour Marat. La Révolution française est-elle une opposition du peuple face à des élites ? Ou une sombre manipulation bourgeoise des aspirations populaires ? Ou bien, grande surprise… quelque chose de plus nuancé ? Enfilez vos perruques et sortez vos guillotines à saucisson, c'est parti pour un échange passionnant avec Olivier Coquard ! Bonne écoute à tous sur Nota Bene. Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out. Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/notabenemovies.
Mes chers camarades, bien le bonjour. Parmi les grandes figures de la révolution française, le nom de Marat est sans doute resté dans les mémoires plus par sa mort marquante que par son parcours. Mais qui était vraiment Marat ? Je vous propose de découvrir un extrait de mon entretien avec Olivier Coquard, historien, agrégé d'histoire et prof au lycée Henri IV à Paris. Il a rédigé sa thèse sur le révolutionnaire Jean-Paul Marat et a ensuite publié plusieurs ouvrages sur la révolution. Retrouvez très bientôt l'entretien intégral sur mon Podcast Nota Bene. Bonne écoute à tous. Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out. Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/notabenemovies.
Découvrez dans le podcast "Au cœur de l'Histoire" le récit de la vie de Charlotte Corday, celle que l'Histoire tient pour responsable du meurtre prémédité de Jean-Paul Marat, homme politique au rôle déterminant pendant la Révolution française. Qui n'a pas en tête le fameux tableau du peintre David représentant le révolutionnaire poignardé dans sa baignoire ? Charlotte Corday, accusée de cet assassinat, est guillotinée le 17 juillet 1793 sur la place de la Révolution. Mais qui est cette jeune femme d'à peine 24 ans sortie de nulle part ? Et qu'est-ce qui a bien pu la pousser à tuer Marat, celui que l'on surnommait "l'ami du peuple" ? Dans cette première partie d'épisode, Clémentine Portier-Kaltenbach nous emmène à la rencontre de Charlotte Corday, jeune femme aux idées bien arrêtées, prête à marquer l'Histoire.
Le 17 juillet 1793, Charlotte Corday (1768-1793) est conduite à l'échafaud après avoir assassiné le député montagnard Jean-Paul Marat (1743-1793), à son domicile parisien du n°30 de la rue des Cordeliers. Alors que la guillotine d'abat devant la foule réunie place de la Révolution, la tête de la jeune normande entame un curieux périple qui l'emmenera jusqu'aux vitrines de l'Exposition Universelle de 1889....
From the earliest moments of the revolution, France radically changed, and there was no going back. The summer of 1789, brought the Great Fear and marked a particularly violent, dramatic, and notable period. These events led to the August decrees promulgated by the National Assembly. In a whirlwind session, the Assembly adopted a series of documents that would define the revolution. The Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen, the abolition of feudalism, and ending aristocratic and religious privilege were some of the more famous work products from the decrees. The Women's March on Versailles in October 1789, would permanently relocate the King, the Royal Family, and the National Assembly to Paris.The early Culture Revolution period ripped through China. The nation would never be the same. The cult of Mao begins. His little red book becomes popular. Student Red Guards, with near absolute immunity, wrecked nearly everything. No part of China was spared. By 1967, the Chinese army, or the Peoples Liberation Army, also got involved in the mayhem. Chairman Mao again changed the course. Red Guards were now the enemy and a new rebel guard came into existence. This time they would be armed. Bloody civil wars in Wuhan and Shanghai proved the revolution was spinning out of control.
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 231, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Let There Be Life 1: Fungi create these to reproduce and your average mushroom makes 16 billion of them. spores. 2: From the Greek for "leaf", they're the individual parts of a flower's corolla. petals. 3: As they have chlorophyll, algae produce food using this process. photosynthesis. 4: From an eyeglass-shaped pattern on its face, a South American bear is called this. a spectacled bear. 5: Each of these on the dragonfly is made up of 28,000 hexagonal-shaped ommatidia. eyes. Round 2. Category: Really Bad Dates 1: In December 1952 a toxic fog gripped this capital city, causing hundreds of deaths. London. 2: On Sept. 30, 1993 a 6.4 earthquake rocked villages in the Maharashtra state in this country, killing thousands. India. 3: This hurricane devastated Central America October 26-31, 1998. Hurricane Mitch. 4: This exploded about 70 seconds after lift-off from Cape Canaveral Jan. 28, 1986. Space Shuttle Challenger. 5: This captain was killed in a skirmish with natives at Kealakekua Bay on Feb. 14, 1779. Captain James Cook. Round 3. Category: A Fashionable Category 1: Romance is a perfume from this designer whom you might call a major "polo" player. Ralph Lauren. 2: Seen here on Dame Edna's dress, these sparkly decorations take their name from an old Italian coin:. sequins. 3: Wallace might know this term for a metal eyelet mainly used on belts but also seen on hems and cuffs. a grommet. 4: Feline name for the full-body stocking made popular by Diana Rigg on "The Avengers". a catsuit. 5: In the 1800s, it was fashionable to wear a cap named for this woman who stabbed Jean-Paul Marat. Charlotte Corday. Round 4. Category: Nba Rules 1: (Hi, I'm Malik Rose) Rule 4, Section 14 says that while an opponent's doing this, I can't run past him, wave my arms or talk trash to him. shooting a free throw. 2: It's the type of foul that can be called on a player who's not even in the game at the time. technical foul. 3: (Hi, I'm Michael Finley) A substitute has to report to this person who gets to sit at a table while we run around. scorekeeper. 4: If a defensive player kicks the ball, this is reset and starts over. the shot clock/24-second clock. 5: (I'm Derek Fisher) In 2001 the time allowed to bring the ball across midcourt was lowered from this to 8 seconds. 10 seconds. Round 5. Category: Teams Of Super Bowl Mvps 1: VI: Roger Staubach. the Dallas Cowboys. 2: IX: Franco Harris. the Pittsburgh Steelers. 3: XXXV: Ray Lewis. the Baltimore Ravens. 4: XI: Fred Biletnikoff. the Raiders. 5: XXII: Doug Williams. the Washington Redskins. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!
By 1793, radical revolutionaries had unleashed a wave of bloodshed that threatened to swallow France whole. Charlotte Corday travels to Paris to wrestle with the mastermind of this reign of terror, Jean-Paul Marat.Sources:For a complete list of sources, please visit https://www.oldbloodpodcast.com/post/episode-9-the-terror-julyMusic: Dellasera by Shane Ivers - https://www.silvermansound.comFor more information, visit www.oldbloodpodcast.com
Jean-Paul Marat terrorized France with his newspaper long before the most famous period of the French Revolution known as the Terror. By September of 1792, Marat and his allies' calls for heads led to four days of unimaginable horror and bloodshed. Sources:Please see https://www.oldbloodpodcast.com/post/episode-8-the-terror-september for a complete list of sources.Music: Dellasera by Shane Ivers - https://www.silvermansound.com
Jean-Paul Marat (1743-1793) was a giant of the French Revolution. I guess you could say that one thing led to another, though, and he ended up dead in a bathtub. His friend, artist Jacques-Louis David (1748-1845), memorialized that gruesome event in today's artwork and in the process, spun the narrative to better serve their shared political aims. Today's image: Jacques-Louis David, The Death of Marat (1793). Oil on canvas. Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Belgium. New episodes every other Friday. Let's keep in touch! Email: artofhistorypod@gmail.com Instagram: @artofhistorypodcast Twitter: @ArtHistoricPod TikTok: @matta_of_fact --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/amanda-matta/support
Charlotte Corday, frequentadora dos meios girondinos na cidade de Caen, viaja para Paris e consegue uma entrevista com o convencional e um dos principais líderes da Revolução Francesa, Jean-Paul Marat. O ‘Montagnard' a recebe em seu quarto de banho em 13 de julho de 1793. Para a jovem senhora, Marat é o principal responsável pela eliminação dos girondinos e pela instauração do “Terror” na França. Ela o apunhala em sua banheira. O “Amigo do Povo” expirou algumas horas mais tarde. Charlotte Corday foi presa e condenada à morte pelo Tribunal Revolucionário.----Quer contribuir com Opera Mundi via PIX? Nossa chave é apoie@operamundi.com.br (Razão Social: Última Instancia Editorial Ltda.). Desde já agradecemos!Assinatura solidária:www.operamundi.com.br/apoio★ Support this podcast ★
Jean-Paul Marat was a French political theorist, physician and scientist, and, during the French Revolution, a journalist and politician. Initially an advocate of basic human rights for the poor, he became increasingly uncompromising in his stance against the new leaders of the revolution. He was assassinated by Charlotte Corday while taking a medicinal bath, as depicted in the painting The Death of Marat.Pietro Querini was the Italian captain of a merchant ship bound for Bruges, when forced to abandon ship during a storm in 1431. After drifting for weeks in winter weather, the survivors find themselves stranded on an island off of Norway in January of 1432. The eleven men, of the original 68, ended up spending three months in Røst, and in turn originated trade between Italy and Norway. To this day Italy is the largest consumer of Norwegian stockfish.The French RevolutionJean-Paul MaratCharlotte CordaySeptember MassacresPietro Querini The Shipwrecked Sailors & the Wandering CodThe Tale of Pietro Querini
En el espacio 'Tenemos un pasado' de Ángeles Caso trazamos el perfil biográfico de Charlotte Corday, guillotinada un 17 de julio de 1793, acusada de asesinar a Jean-Paul Marat durante la revolución francesa. Escuchar audio
Nos tomamos el 'Café de las 9' con Rosa María Calaf, que ha invitado a Bruno Galizzi, investigador y evaluador de la organización Blueprint for Free Speech. Esta entidad acaba de publicar un informe sobre cómo percibimos los españoles a los alertadores (denunciantes de corrupción). En 'Regreso al presente' de David Zurdo nos preguntamos si los coches eléctricos son realmente la solución definitiva para conseguir una movilidad sostenible. Y en el espacio 'Tenemos un pasado' de Ángeles Caso trazamos el perfil biográfico de Charlotte Corday, guillotinada un 17 de julio de 1793 acusada de asesinar a Jean-Paul Marat durante la revolución francesa. Escuchar audio
The Death of Marat by Jacques-Louis David in 1793 depicts the body of Jean-Paul Marat lying dead in his bath after his murder, and is one of the most famous images of the French Revolution…For more information and to see the artwork being discussed please visit www.seventh-art.com/podcast
1793. július 13-án gyilkolta meg Charlotte Corday Jean-Paul Marat francia politikust, a jakobinusok egyik legradikálisabb vezetőjét. Marat-nak, a forradalmi terror és diktatúra szószólójaként jelentős szerepe volt XVI. Lajos 1793. januári kivégzésében, és a Gironde-dal való leszámolásban is – Corday vélhetően utóbbi párt iránt érzett szimpátiája miatt gyilkolta meg őt... --- Írta: Hegedüs Péter | Felolvasta: Ambrus Attila József | Zene: Beethoven 9. szimfónia | Címkép: Jaques Louis David: Marat, Jean-Paul (1793) | Filmen megtekinthető: https://youtu.be/Q7N5lhGovDI #hegeduspeter #ambrusattilajozsef #ambrusaalkotoistudioja
A conversation between Cliff Conner and Sarah Lazare about the history of scientific corruption and abuse and prospects for change today. ———————————————— The atomic bombs that ended World War II heralded the rise of the United States to first place in the realm of science. Expectations of what American science and technology could accomplish in an era of peace were virtually unlimited. Disease would be conquered and hunger eradicated. New industries and inventions would create global prosperity, and the rockets that had carried German bombs would instead extend human exploration to the moon and beyond. Seventy-five years later, we look back and wonder: What happened to the dream? That's the question Cliff Conner explores in his new book, The Tragedy of American Science. The book's subtitle, From Truman to Trump, defines the timeline of this history of scientific corruption and abuse—from the nuclear bombs that obliterated two Japanese cities, through the Cold War and the never-ending “War on Terror,” to the existential threat posed by global warming and the pandemic today. It's not a happy story, but it's one that must be confronted if the tragedy is to be overcome. Clifford D. Conner is a historian of science at the School of Professional Studies, CUNY Graduate Center. He is the author of A People's History of Science (Bold Type Books, 2005) and biographies of three revolutionaries: Jean Paul Marat, Arthur O'Connor, and Colonel Despard. You can get a copy of his latest book with Haymarket, The Tragedy of American Science, today. Sarah Lazare is web editor and reporter for In These Times. She comes from a background in independent journalism for publications including The Nation, The Intercept, and Jacobin. A former staff writer for AlterNet and Common Dreams, Sarah co-edited the book About Face: Military Resisters Turn Against War. Sarah got her start in journalism reporting for the Independent Media Center movement. ———————————————— Order a copy of The Tragedy of American Science: https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/1467-the-tragedy-of-american-science Order a copy of A People's History of Science: https://bookshop.org/a/1039/9781560257486 Watch the live event recording: https://youtu.be/VFHRzkSjocc Buy books from Haymarket: www.haymarketbooks.org Follow us on Soundcloud: soundcloud.com/haymarketbooks
In this weeks show, Kendra and Gillian are reading Plutarch and fighting fake news, as they discuss Charlotte Corday and her role in the death of Jean-Paul Marat and the French Revolution. And Gillian wrestles with a deeply rooted urge to travel back in time, and punch Maximilien Robespierre in the dick! #badasswomenofhistory #frenchrevolution #madameguillotine #frenchpolitics #sansculotte #charlottecorday Follow us on Instagram: @badasswomanofhistory and Facebook: @BWoHPodcast Badass Women of History The Podcast is produced by Industrial Sound & Magic.
This episode of Women of War takes a look at Charlotte Corday, later dubbed the ‘Angel of Assassination', who murdered the leader of the Jacobins, Jean-Paul Marat, in the French Revolution. Join us to learn why she did it, and how people saw her actions. This podcast contains references to atrocities carried out during the French revolution, including beheadings and the defilement of a corpse. It also contains some coarse language. It may not be suitable for all listeners. This podcast is recorded on Wurundjeri land and we pay our respects to elders past and present. Sovereignty was never ceded. All efforts have been made to ensure the accuracy of the information presented in this podcast however with the nature of historical research, there may be mistakes or inconsistencies. Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram @womenofwarpod for updates, sneak peeks and behind-the-scenes shenanigans. Check out our new website at womenofwarpod.com! Intro and Outro Music: Frosty Forest by Shane Ivers - https://www.silvermansound.com
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Jasmin and Maggie discuss Charlotte Corday's assassination of Jean-Paul Marat. **For a full source list, please visit thegoodolddayspod.com.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/darknostalgiaworks)
Historian Dr. Clifford Conner talks about John Paul Marat's unparalleled and unacknowledged influence on the causes and success of the French Revolution—an event Conner describes as arguably the most significant chapter in human history. Conner shares an updated account of his vivid and colorful 1997 book, Jean Paul Marat, only the second English-language biography in the last hundred years of the controversial and often misunderstood French revolutionary.During the program. Dr. Conner compares Marat to persecuted journalist Julian Assange. Like the Wikileaks founder, Marat, the popular and charismatic truth teller, was falsely smeared and accused and arrested. He was forced underground for 3 years until the insurrection of August 10, 1792—the second of the four most significant turning points of the Revolution.Other celebrated and key figures of the French Revolution—Danton, Robespierre, Desmoulins, Hebert, Mirabeau, Freron, Paine, Lafayette—are included in Conner's reflections on Marat's life during this turbulent, world changing epoch. His story concludes with a moment by moment retelling of Charlotte Corday's ghastly murder of the heroic figure.
Charlotte Corday inser 1793 att endast ett drastiskt dåd kan rädda revolutionen och Frankrike undan totalt kaos. Hon far därefter till Paris och skaffar sig en rejäl kniv. Beslutsamt går hon sedan till Jean-Paul Marat, en av nyckelpersonerna i staden. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The radical French journalist Jean-Paul Marat was stabbed to death in his bathtub by Charlotte ...
Sean and Lucy team up once again with Max Feldman to explore Sadeian liberty, the principles of Enlightenment, the history of madness, Artaud's theatre of cruelty and the still ongoing the repercussions of the French Revolution in Peter Brooke's 1967 adaptation of Peter Weiss's play The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade
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Connu pour avoir eu l'habitude de passer ses journées dans une baignoire, Jean-Paul Marat est finalement mort assassiné dans son bain, le 13 juillet 1793. Maculée de sang, une des pages du journal qu'il tenait à ce moment-là a finalement été analysée par des généticiens catalans. Leurs recherches ont pu livrer les secrets de cette mystérieuse maladie de peau qui démangeait le député montagnard... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Il teatro di “Arte e Salute” fa scuola alla psichiatria nipponica “Occorre tirarsi fuori dal fosso per i capelli, rovesciare se stessi da dentro in fuori e guardare il mondo con occhi nuovi.” Questa frase è un estratto dall'opera teatrale dal titolo “La Persecuzione e l'assassinio di Jean Paul Marat”o più semplicemente “Marat/Sade”, che racconta di come il marchese de Sade inizia a preparare, all'interno del manicomio di Charenton in cui è rinchiuso, uno spettacolo teatrale sull'assassinio di Jean paul Marat, impiegando come attori gli internati del manicomio. Quest'opera è stata portata in scena dagli attori di “Arte e Salute onlus”, la compagnia teatrale di Bologna diretta da Nanni Garella, già qualche tempo fa. Ma quest'anno, il quarantesimo dalla legge Basaglia è l'occasione per una tourneé speciale, in Giappone. Gli attori sono partiti per Tokyo e dintorni con una delegazione di psichiatri del Dipartimento di Salute mentale di Bologna, tra cui il direttore Angelo Fioritti, per portare nel paese del Sol Levante il modello terapeutico attivo in Italia dopo la legge 180 del 1978. Obiettivo del viaggio è mostrare ad una realtà in cui esistono ancora i manicomi che curare senza rinchiudere è possibile. Agli attori abbiamo chiesto aspettative e riflessioni sull'opera che andrà in scena. “La parte più bella? Quando alla fine cantiamo l'inno ‘Marat siam tutti qua, vogliamo la libertà', è stato un momento di grande soddisfazione perché siamo andati oltre il pregiudizio del manicomio, questo dà senso al nostro lavoro”, racconta uno degli attori, Luca. “La legge Basaglia è una conquista culturale ed etica che in molti ci invidiano, un modello che è nostro dovere esportare”, ha aggiunto Marco Lombardo, l'assessore al lavoro, alle relazioni internazionali e alle politiche del terzo settore del Comune di Bologna, partito con la delegazione. “Viaggio, libertà esperienza, ecco quello che mi aspetto dal Giappone”, conclude Moreno , il “Marat” della compagnia Arte e Salute.....Tra apocalissi interiori e “La fine del mondo”....“Le apocalissi non si generano solo nella società ma anche dentro ognuno di noi, sono quei momenti di crisi in cui le persone si allontanano dal mondo e i propri valori perdono di senso”. Lo dice ai microfoni di Psicoradio Nicola Martellozzo, antropologo dell'università di Bologna, presentando il seminario su “La fine del mondo”, l'opera incompiuta di Ernesto De Martino, che si terrà sabato 27 ottobre al circolo CostArena di Bologna. “Ognuno di noi ha in sé la capacità di affrontare le proprie crisi – spiega Martellozzo - e De Martino ce lo fa vedere, ci insegna che il rinnovamento interiore è possibile”...L'evento fa parte della rassegna (In)Attualità del Pensiero Critico
Il teatro di “Arte e Salute” fa scuola alla psichiatria nipponica “Occorre tirarsi fuori dal fosso per i capelli, rovesciare se stessi da dentro in fuori e guardare il mondo con occhi nuovi.” Questa frase è un estratto dall’opera teatrale dal titolo “La Persecuzione e l’assassinio di Jean Paul Marat”o più semplicemente “Marat/Sade”, che racconta di come il marchese de Sade inizia a preparare, all’interno del manicomio di Charenton in cui è rinchiuso, uno spettacolo teatrale sull’assassinio di Jean paul Marat, impiegando come attori gli internati del manicomio. Quest’opera è stata portata in scena dagli attori di “Arte e Salute onlus”, la compagnia teatrale di Bologna diretta da Nanni Garella, già qualche tempo fa. Ma quest’anno, il quarantesimo dalla legge Basaglia è l’occasione per una tourneé speciale, in Giappone. Gli attori sono partiti per Tokyo e dintorni con una delegazione di psichiatri del Dipartimento di Salute mentale di Bologna, tra cui il direttore Angelo Fioritti, per portare nel paese del Sol Levante il modello terapeutico attivo in Italia dopo la legge 180 del 1978. Obiettivo del viaggio è mostrare ad una realtà in cui esistono ancora i manicomi che curare senza rinchiudere è possibile. Agli attori abbiamo chiesto aspettative e riflessioni sull’opera che andrà in scena. “La parte più bella? Quando alla fine cantiamo l’inno ‘Marat siam tutti qua, vogliamo la libertà’, è stato un momento di grande soddisfazione perché siamo andati oltre il pregiudizio del manicomio, questo dà senso al nostro lavoro”, racconta uno degli attori, Luca. “La legge Basaglia è una conquista culturale ed etica che in molti ci invidiano, un modello che è nostro dovere esportare”, ha aggiunto Marco Lombardo, l’assessore al lavoro, alle relazioni internazionali e alle politiche del terzo settore del Comune di Bologna, partito con la delegazione. “Viaggio, libertà esperienza, ecco quello che mi aspetto dal Giappone”, conclude Moreno , il “Marat” della compagnia Arte e Salute.....Tra apocalissi interiori e “La fine del mondo”....“Le apocalissi non si generano solo nella società ma anche dentro ognuno di noi, sono quei momenti di crisi in cui le persone si allontanano dal mondo e i propri valori perdono di senso”. Lo dice ai microfoni di Psicoradio Nicola Martellozzo, antropologo dell’università di Bologna, presentando il seminario su “La fine del mondo”, l’opera incompiuta di Ernesto De Martino, che si terrà sabato 27 ottobre al circolo CostArena di Bologna. “Ognuno di noi ha in sé la capacità di affrontare le proprie crisi – spiega Martellozzo - e De Martino ce lo fa vedere, ci insegna che il rinnovamento interiore è possibile”...L’evento fa parte della rassegna (In)Attualità del Pensiero Critico
Il teatro di “Arte e Salute” fa scuola alla psichiatria nipponica “Occorre tirarsi fuori dal fosso per i capelli, rovesciare se stessi da dentro in fuori e guardare il mondo con occhi nuovi.” Questa frase è un estratto dall’opera teatrale dal titolo “La Persecuzione e l’assassinio di Jean Paul Marat”o più semplicemente “Marat/Sade”, che racconta di come il marchese de Sade inizia a preparare, all’interno del manicomio di Charenton in cui è rinchiuso, uno spettacolo teatrale sull’assassinio di Jean paul Marat, impiegando come attori gli internati del manicomio. Quest’opera è stata portata in scena dagli attori di “Arte e Salute onlus”, la compagnia teatrale di Bologna diretta da Nanni Garella, già qualche tempo fa. Ma quest’anno, il quarantesimo dalla legge Basaglia è l’occasione per una tourneé speciale, in Giappone. Gli attori sono partiti per Tokyo e dintorni con una delegazione di psichiatri del Dipartimento di Salute mentale di Bologna, tra cui il direttore Angelo Fioritti, per portare nel paese del Sol Levante il modello terapeutico attivo in Italia dopo la legge 180 del 1978. Obiettivo del viaggio è mostrare ad una realtà in cui esistono ancora i manicomi che curare senza rinchiudere è possibile. Agli attori abbiamo chiesto aspettative e riflessioni sull’opera che andrà in scena. “La parte più bella? Quando alla fine cantiamo l’inno ‘Marat siam tutti qua, vogliamo la libertà’, è stato un momento di grande soddisfazione perché siamo andati oltre il pregiudizio del manicomio, questo dà senso al nostro lavoro”, racconta uno degli attori, Luca. “La legge Basaglia è una conquista culturale ed etica che in molti ci invidiano, un modello che è nostro dovere esportare”, ha aggiunto Marco Lombardo, l’assessore al lavoro, alle relazioni internazionali e alle politiche del terzo settore del Comune di Bologna, partito con la delegazione. “Viaggio, libertà esperienza, ecco quello che mi aspetto dal Giappone”, conclude Moreno , il “Marat” della compagnia Arte e Salute.....Tra apocalissi interiori e “La fine del mondo”....“Le apocalissi non si generano solo nella società ma anche dentro ognuno di noi, sono quei momenti di crisi in cui le persone si allontanano dal mondo e i propri valori perdono di senso”. Lo dice ai microfoni di Psicoradio Nicola Martellozzo, antropologo dell’università di Bologna, presentando il seminario su “La fine del mondo”, l’opera incompiuta di Ernesto De Martino, che si terrà sabato 27 ottobre al circolo CostArena di Bologna. “Ognuno di noi ha in sé la capacità di affrontare le proprie crisi – spiega Martellozzo - e De Martino ce lo fa vedere, ci insegna che il rinnovamento interiore è possibile”...L’evento fa parte della rassegna (In)Attualità del Pensiero Critico
Three blokes tackling the big issues one week at a time - credit to the boys. Well slap my ass and call me Jean-Paul Marat what a week! As well as the good old Chooks getting up, we delve deep into the latest performance of the captain of captains - L. Franklin. Toby Greene once again bringing some far-Eastern culture to the footy field and what Kane Cornes thinks of that. Serena Williams’ motherly instincts (She’s a mother if you didn’t know). This and much, much more you bloody fool’s head. Make sure your head screws are tightened and torqued to the handbook specified 98Nm at all times. If symptoms persist, see your healthcare professional.
Charlotte Corday set out on her journey to kill Jean-Paul Marat believing it was the only way to save France. So what made a young woman with no known political connections and no history of violence turn to murder?
Karsten Thurfjell tar sig an två verk ur världsdramatiken som kretsar kring den franska revolutionen: Stanisawa Przybyszewskas Affären Danton och Peter Weiss Mordet på Marat. Przybyszewska skrev sin mest känd pjäs Affären Danton 1929. Den handlar om den politiska kampen mellan Danton och Robespierre men urpremiären 1931 blev ingen större framgång. Przybyszewska återupptäcktes dock under 1960-talet och 1975 satte Andrzej Wajda satte upp Affären Danton vid Allmänna teatern i Warszawa. Peter Weiss pjäs Mordet på Marat heter egentligen Jean Paul Marat förföljd och mördad så som det framställs av patienterna på hospitalet Charenton under ledning av herr de Sade och uruppfördes 1964. Det är ett drama om ett drama och utspelar sig 1808 på ett mentalsjukhus där patienterna sätter upp en pjäs om mordet på den revolutionären Marat 1793.
Karsten Thurfjell tar sig an två verk ur världsdramatiken som kretsar kring den franska revolutionen: Stanisawa Przybyszewskas Affären Danton och Peter Weiss Mordet på Marat. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. Przybyszewska skrev sin mest känd pjäs Affären Danton 1929. Den handlar om den politiska kampen mellan Danton och Robespierre men urpremiären 1931 blev ingen större framgång. Przybyszewska återupptäcktes dock under 1960-talet och 1975 satte Andrzej Wajda satte upp Affären Danton vid Allmänna teatern i Warszawa. Peter Weiss pjäs Mordet på Marat heter egentligen Jean Paul Marat förföljd och mördad så som det framställs av patienterna på hospitalet Charenton under ledning av herr de Sade och uruppfördes 1964. Det är ett drama om ett drama och utspelar sig 1808 på ett mentalsjukhus där patienterna sätter upp en pjäs om mordet på den revolutionären Marat 1793.
Peter Brook, visionary director, in conversation with Richard Wolinsky. Peter Brook is one of the greatest theatrical directors of the twentieth century. Artistic director of the Royal Shakespeare Company for twenty years from 1962-1982, he transformed how the English speaking world looked at the plays of William Shakespeare. He is perhaps best known, during those years, for his production of “The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade,” also known as “Marat/Sade,” which later became a film and turned Glenda Jackson into an international star. His other films include “Lord of the Flies,” “Meetings with Remarkable Men” and a version of “King Lear” starring Paul Scofield. His 1985 nine-hour adaptation of the Indian epic Mahabharata is probably his masterpiece. Now, at the age of 92, he and his collaborator Marie Helene Estienne have gone back to the Mahabharata with a short theatrical piece, “Battlefield,” which is playing at ACT's Geary Theater through May 21st. This interview was recorded on April 24, 2017 in a rehearsal studio in the ACT offices in San Francisco. American Conservatory website Peter Brook Wikipedia page The post Peter Brook appeared first on KPFA.
In the 18 December Advent Podcast, comedian Mark Steel tells Robin Ince why the French revolutionary Jean-Paul Marat deserves an annual day in his honour. Recorded in 2008. Music by Andrea Rocca.
PRODUCER | DIRECTOR | PLAYWRIGHT | SCREENWRITER - This week our guest's are Brad Mays and Lorenda Starfelt. Brad and Lorenda both just won the California Film Awards "Diamond Award" for their collaborated effort on the 2009 film release, "The Watermelon." Brad is an award-winning veteran of dozens of stage, television and independent film productions spanning thirty years. His films include: the award-winning "A Way Back In," "The Bacchae," and "Stage Fright." Mr. Mays notable stage productions include: "The Water Hen," by Stanlislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz, "Dragon Slayers," by Stanley Keyes, a multi-media adaptation of "A Clockwork Orange," Euripides' "The Bacchae," Peter Weiss' "The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade," "Equus," and many others.
DIRECTOR | WRITER | EDITOR - This week our guest is BRAD MAYS. He is an award-winning veteran of dozens of stage, television and independent film productions spanning some thirty years. Brad Mays is now, with the completion & release of "The Watermelon" and "Singularity," as well as the production of his new web series "Featherweight," finally coming into his own as a filmmaker. His films include: the award-winning "A Way Back In," "The Bacchae," and "Stage Fright." Notable stage productions include: "The Water Hen," by Stanlislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz, "Dragon Slayers," by Stanley Keyes, a multi-media adaptation of "A Clockwork Orange," Euripides' "The Bacchae," Peter Weiss' : "The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the "Marquis de Sade," "Equus," and many others.