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Quando la pace o la tregua arriveranno e rimetteremo in fila eventi e pensieri della guerra, il diario di una scrittrice dal fronte ucraino sarà particolarmente prezioso. Investigando sui crimini russi, incontra testimoni e vittime ma finisce per raccontare molto di più, tutta la brutalità e la complessità di un conflitto. Il libro sopravviverà alla guerra ma la sua autrice no, uccisa da un missile a Kramatorsk. Guardando le donne guardare la guerra di Victoria Amelina, Guanda Questo e gli altri podcast gratuiti del Post sono possibili grazie a chi si abbona al Post e ne sostiene il lavoro. Se vuoi fare la tua parte, abbonati al Post. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
di Massimiliano Coccia | in collaborazione con Linkiesta | Rassegna stampa del 12 03 2025 Ieri al Parlamento Europeo a Strasburgo è stata intitolata a Victoria Amelina la Sala di lettura. Un gesto importante che la colloca per sempre dentro la storia europea, un gesto di resistenza all'imperialismo culturale del Cremlino. Ma la storia di Victoria Amelina ci porta a parlare di pace, di guerra e di cessate il fuoco.
"As long as a writer is read, he is alive." - Victoria Amelina 37-year-old author, Victoria Amelina was documenting the pivotal work Ukrainian women were doing in the Russia-Ukraine War when she was tragically killed in a Russian missile attack. Instead of letting her words be lost, her husband, friends, and colleagues came together to ensure her work was shared with the world. With the help of loved ones, Victoria Amelina now lives on through her book, 'Looking at Women Looking at War.' Close friend of Victoria, Ukrainian journalist and cultural manager Tetyana Teren, joins Benjamin to reflect on how she and Victoria had worked together to publish other deceased writers' works, and why it was crucial Victoria's story be finished. She also discusses the heart-wrenching challenge of watching so many of her colleagues and friends fall victim to the war and the driving force that pushes her forward: knowing the work she and fellow Ukrainian journalists are doing is crucial in revealing the realities of the war and preserving Ukrainian history and culture. Follow Benjamin on X: @BenjaminHallFNC Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Den ukrainske forfatter og fortæller Victoria Amelina skrev intimt om ukrainske kvinders oplevelser i Krigen mod Rusland - om betydningen af an ansigtscreme, når verden smuldrer eller historien om en pige med en lyserød kuffert. Hun blev dræbt under sin dækning - nu er essaysamlingen "Looking at women, looking at war" udkommet posthumt. Vores kultur er ofte blevet beskrevet som en cancel kultur. Men alligevel skulle Marilyn Manson spille for fyldte sale. Vi dykker ned i, hvorvidt cancel kulturen egentlig er et fantom, og hvad det fortæller om vores nutid, hvor woke erklæres død. Vært: Casper Dyrholm.
From the Poo Museum to Freud, enjoy the meandering journey of this episode's conversation. Jane and Fi also discuss chaff, Romantasy, and property shows. Plus, the executive director of PEN Ukraine, Tetyana Teren, discusses the work of her late friend Victoria Amelina and Victoria's book 'Looking at Women, Looking at War'. The next book club pick has been announced! 'Eight Months on Ghazzah Street' is by Hilary Mantel. If you want to contact the show to ask a question and get involved in the conversation then please email us: janeandfi@times.radioFollow us on Instagram! @janeandfiPodcast Producer: Eve SalusburyExecutive Producer: Rosie Cutler Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Is the Trump administration gearing up for talks on Ukraine? Victoria and Vitaly are joined in the studio to discuss this by Christina Lamb of The Sunday Times. She also talks about the posthumous release of a new book by her friend Victoria Amelina, who was killed in Kramatorsk in 2023. ‘Looking at Women Looking at War' is released later this week.And former Conservative MP Jack Lopresti tells us why he's gone to serve in Ukraine's military… and whether his children are happy about his decision.Today's episode is presented by Victoria Derbyshire and Vitaly Shevchenko. The producers were Ben Carter, Ryan Johnston and Stuart Denman. The technical producer was Philip Bull. The series producer is Tim Walklate. The assistant editor is Ben Mundy. Email Ukrainecast@bbc.co.uk with your questions and comments. You can also send us a message or voice note via WhatsApp, Signal or Telegram to +44 330 1239480You can join the Ukrainecast discussion on Newscast's Discord server here: tinyurl.com/ukrainecastdiscord
Day 1,041Today, we report how Azerbaijan's President accuses Russia of trying to "hush up" Moscow's responsibility for the doomed jet and we hear about a new Fellowship in the name of Ukrainian writer and friend to the podcast, Victoria Amelina.Contributors:Dominic Nicholls (Associate Editor of Defence). @DomNicholls on X.Dr Sasha Dovzhyk (Director of Index Ukraine). @sasha_weirdsley on X.Links:Victoria Amelina Fellowship:https://www.index-ukraine.org/news/victoria-amelina-fellowshipDonate to David's charity:This Christmas, the Telegraph is honouring the life and work of our late colleague David Knowles by working with Humanity & Inclusion, a charity helping the ill, vulnerable and disabled left behind in Ukraine's warzones. You can donate here:https://telegraph.ctdonate.org/ Subscribe to The Telegraph: telegraph.co.uk/ukrainethelatestEmail: ukrainepod@telegraph.co.uk Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Nunca pensei dizer isto mas esta conversa foi (e é) literalmente de ir às lágrimas. Que beleza. Encantei-me pelos seus livros e depois pelo escritor, que abriu o coração nesta conversa tão... quentinha. Saímos abraçados, não consigo explicar de outra forma. É considerado um dos escritores mais talentosos da literatura latino-americana contemporânea e confirmo. As leituras que o escritor escolheu: Porque não sou Cristão, Bertrand Russell Fuga sem fim, Joseph Roth Léxico Familiar, Natalia Ginzburg Se isto é um homem, Primo Levi Outras referências: “Voltaire”; (Denis) Diderot; O nome da rosa, Umberto Eco; Em busca do Tempo Perdido, Proust; Arte de amar, Ovídeo; Joseph Roth: Job; A lenda do Santo bebedor (um conto). "Correspondência 1927-1938, Joseph Roth e Stefan Sweig; O mundo de ontem, Stefan Sweig Natalia Ginzburg: As pequenas virtudes; Todos os nossos ontens. Primo Levi: A Trégua; Os Que Sucumbem e os Que se Salvam. Poesia de Alberto Caeiro; As Mil e uma Noites. Alguns dos livros que escreveu e que estão em Portugal: Somos o esquecimento que seremos; Salvo o meu coração, tudo está bem. O que ofereci: Ágora, Ana Luísa Amaral. A jornalista sobre a qual vai escrever: Victoria Amelina. A editora de Natalia Ginzburg que o Hector refere era com Cesare Pavese. Os livros aqui: www.wook.pt
The bellicose and authoritarian Russian state's propaganda exploitation of the anarcho-pacifist novelist Leo Tolstoy is an obvious and perverse irony. But a less obvious irony also presents itself. Like all fascist regimes, that of Vladimir Putin is stigmatizing and even criminalizing homosexuality and other sexual "deviance." Following alarming reports of "concentration camps" for gay men in the Russian republic of Chechnya, Moscow began to impose an anti-gay agenda nationwide. A 2020 constitutional reform officially enshrined "traditional marriage," while a "gay propaganda law" imposes penalties on any outward expression of gay identity, resulting in police raids on Moscow gay bars. The "LGBT movement" has been designated a "terrorist organization"; media depictions of same-sex love are banned as "deviant content." Yet the venerable littérateur now glorified as a symbol of Russian nationalism may have himself been gay. In Episode 249 of the CounterVortex podcast, Bill Weinberg interviews Javier Sethness Castro, author of Queer Tolstoy: A Psychobiography (Routledge 2023). In one sickening propaganda display, Tolstoy's photo was dramatically plastered by Putin's regime onto a barrier fence erected around the Mariupol Drama Theater—a civilian refuge that was bombed during the initial invasion of the Ukrainian port city in March 2022, leading to hundreds of deaths (including many children). By contrast, Marta Albertini, Tolstoy's great-grand daughter, hosts Ukrainian refugees in Switzerland. Sethness Castro notes that some contemporary Ukrainian ant-war writers are in the actual tradition of Tolstoy. Victoria Amelina, a Ukrainian poet and war-crimes investigator who was killed in a missile attack on a pizzeria in Kramatorsk in 2023, wrote the book Dom's Dream Kingdom, narrated from the perspective of a dog who watches his human family struggle over Ukrainian history. This is reminiscent of Tolstoy's short story "Strider," an early harbinger of the animal rights movement, which is written from the perspective of a horse. Another link to Tolstoy in the news is the British Columbia government's recent apology to the Doukhobors, a Russian dissident religious sect, for forcibly assimilating their children in the 1950's. Tolstoy supported the Doukhobors, who were persecuted by the Tsars for their pacifism, and even wrote Resurrection (1899) to finance their migration from the Russian Empire to Canada. His son Sergei Tolstoy and biographer Aylmer Maude led the resettlement, and Peter Kropotkin (another paradoxical anarchist aristocrat) also encouraged it. A reassessment of Tolstoy's sexuality is apropos at this moment in light of recent challenges raised against millennia of Christian homophobia. In any case, Tolstoy's anti-militarism provides important perspectives for our current moment, with multiple genocides ongoing, and humanity on the knife's edge due to the risk of escalating regional wars in both Europe and the Middle East. Listen on SoundCloud or via Patreon. https://www.patreon.com/countervortex Production by Chris Rywalt We ask listeners to donate just $1 per weekly podcast via Patreon -- or $2 for our new special offer! We now have 69 subscribers. If you appreciate our work, please become Number 70!
Valzhyna Mort joins Kevin Young to read “Testimonies” by Victoria Amelina, which Mort translated from the Ukrainian, and “Map,” by Wisława Szymborska, which was translated, from the Polish, by Clare Cavanagh. Mort's collection “Music for the Dead and Resurrected” won the 2021 International Griffin Poetry Prize and the 2022 UNT Rilke Prize. Her other honors include a 2021 Rome Prize in literature and fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the Lannan Foundation, and the Amy Clampitt Fund.
Recordando a Victoria Amelina, a un año de su asesinato por un misil ruso.Lee el artículo aquí: https://jugo.pe/la-escritora-que-ensenaba-superpoderes/Al suscribirte a Jugo recibes nuestro contenido diariamente. Tienes la oportunidad de ser juguero por un día. Pero, sobre todo, patrocinas que nuestro contenido llegue gratuitamente a personas que lo necesitan. Contamos con tu apoyo para no desenchufar la licuadoraSuscríbete aquí. Haz clic aquí para seguirnos en TwitterHaz clic aquí para seguirnos en FacebookHaz clic aquí para seguirnos en InstagramAl suscribirte a Jugo recibes nuestro contenido diariamente. Tienes la oportunidad de ser juguero por un día. Pero, sobre todo, patrocinas que nuestro contenido llegue gratuitamente a personas que lo necesitan. Contamos con tu apoyo para no desenchufar la licuadora. Suscríbete aquí. Haz clic aquí para seguirnos en Twitter Haz clic aquí para seguirnos en Facebook Haz clic aquí para seguirnos en Instagram
Day 860.Today, we bring you the latest news from Ukraine, look at how Russia has been blamed for jamming GPS signals on British military jets and ask quite why Belarus - a country hosting Russian nuclear missiles - is rattling the nuclear sabre once more.Contributors:Dominic Nicholls (Host). @DomNicholls on X.Gareth Corfield (Transport Correspondent). @GazTheJourno on X.Ben Butcher (Data Editor). @bienbutcher on X.Hamish De Bretton-Gordon (Former Tank Commander, Chemical and Biological Weapons Expert). @HamishDBG on X.Articles referenced:London Ukrainian Reviewhttps://x.com/ukrlondonreview/status/1807698342840869075Pre-order for Victoria Amelina's book:https://x.com/olgatokariuk/status/1807724459677114612Subscribe to The Telegraph: telegraph.co.uk/ukrainethelatestEmail: ukrainepod@telegraph.co.uk Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Gnedkova, Ganna www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Lesart
Gnedkova, Ganna www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Lesart
Lesart - das Literaturmagazin (ganze Sendung) - Deutschlandfunk Kultur
Gnedkova, Ganna www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Lesart
Sergio Jaramillo, Excomisionado de paz y exasesor de seguridad nacional en Colombia
Voices of children es una ONG ucraniana que ofrece apoyo psicológico gratuito a niños y sus familias. Tienen 15 centros en Ucrania y profesionales de primer nivel. Nos cuentan cómo afecta a los niños crecer y desarrollarse rodeados por la guerra.Olga Tymchenko es la directora de comunicación de la ONG. Por su trabajo conoció a Valeriia, una niña que había sido deportada a Rusia y consiguió volver por sus propios medios, y decidió acogerla. Ahora Valeriia estudia medicina. Recordamos a Victoria Amelina, escritora que falleció en el ataque a Kramatorsk hace un año, a través de los testimonios de sus amigos, que han seguido con su trabajo en su ausencia.'Diario de Ucrania' es un podcast que publicamos todos los miércoles en el que encontrarás el contexto necesario para entender lo que está pasando en la guerra tras la invasión rusa. Escuchamos a analistas, militares, periodistas, trabajadores humanitarios y a los ciudadanos ucranianos y rusos que sufren en primera persona este conflicto.Escuchar audio
Rassegna stampa del 22 12 23 | La scrittrice ucraina Victoria Amelina uccisa dai russi a luglio è la persona dell'anno per la nostra rassegna stampa. Il suo lavoro intellettuale, la sua volontà di scavare a mani nude nella realtà e il suo straordinario impegno civile sono per tutte e tutti i cittadini europei un esempio. La raccontiamo con gli articoli di Paolo Giordano, Elena Janeczek e una sua poesia.
What story can Ukraine tell people in Latin America? Why is it important to have a conversation beyond “geopolitics” and focus on human experiences, on suffering and compassion, and on courage and resistance? The guest of this episode is Sergio Jaramillo, former High Commissioner for Peace of Colombia and founder of the campaign of solidarity with Ukraine ¡Aguanta Ucrania!, which is mobilising Latin American writers, musicians, human rights defenders, politicians and other voices in support of Ukraine's struggle against the Russian invasion. We had this conversation on June 25th, 2023, in Kyiv. The next day, Sergio traveled to the warzone in Eastern Ukraine, together with his Colombian colleagues: writer Hector Abbad, and journalist Catalina Gomez. They were accompanied by a Ukrainian writer, Victoria Amelina. On June 27th, as they were sitting at the Ria Lounge restaurant in Kramatorsk, 40 kilometers from the frontline, it was struck by a Russian missile. Victoria Amelina was severely injured and succumbed to her wounds a few days later in a hospital in Dnipro on July 1st. Since that tragedy, we didn't know how to publish our conversation, or whether we should publish it all. Emotionally it was tough. It took us several months to come back to it, but we asked Sergio to meet again, this time online, to tell me what happened in Kramatorsk on that day. We attached this excerpt to our conversation. Host: Volodymyr Yermolenko, a Ukrainian philosopher and journalist, chief editor of UkraineWorld.org. Related episodes: Victoria Amelina. In Memoriam https://ukraineworld.org/en/podcasts/victoria-amelina-memoriam On Empathy - with Catalina Gomez https://ukraineworld.org/en/podcasts/ep-269
What do we get if we turn away from the abstract “geopolitical” or “military” analysis of this war and talk about the human side of it? What do we see if we look at this war primarily as a story of human suffering and courage? This episode's guest is Catalina Gomez, a Colombian journalist working in Ukraine for France 24. In this episode, we talk about the empathy and compassion that spans oceans and vast distances. We also talk about Ukrainian writer Victoria Amelina, who was killed by a Russian missile strike in Kramatorsk which Catalina managed to survive. UkraineWorld (ukraineworld.org) is brought to you by Internews Ukraine, one of the largest Ukrainian media NGOs. Support us at patreon.com/ukraineworld. We provide exclusive content for our patrons. You can also support our volunteer trips to the frontlines at PayPal: ukraine.resisting@gmail.com.
ÖVERSÄTTNING: Ida Börjel och Julia Musakovska UPPLÄSNING: Ida Börjel DIKT: ”Dikt om en kråka” av Victoria AmelinaDikten har publicerats i Sydsvenska Dagbladet, 19/7 2023.MUSIK: Hildegard von Bingen: O virtus sapientiaeEXEKUTÖR: Raphaela Gromes, cello, Luzernfestivalens stråkar, Daniel Dodds, dirigent
Eighteen months into the invasion of Ukraine, Tetyana Ogarkova and Volodymyr Yermolenko, hosts of the podcast Explaining Ukraine, return to talk to co-hosts Whitney Terrell and V.V. Ganeshananthan about how the war has affected Ukrainian artists and how they're responding. They talk about the actions of deeply engaged writers and intellectuals they know, like Yaryna Chornohuz, a young poet who's an activist and has joined the army as a paramedic. They also give an update on what's happening at the front and the possibility of the formation of an international war tribunal to investigate crimes of the Russian Federation. To hear the full episode, subscribe through iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app (include the forward slashes when searching). You can also listen by streaming from the player below. Check out video versions of our interviews on the Fiction/Non/Fiction Instagram account, the Fiction/Non/Fiction YouTube Channel, and our show website: https://www.fnfpodcast.net/ This episode of the podcast was produced by Anne Kniggendorf. Tetyana Ogarkova and Volodymyr Yermolenko Explaining Ukraine (podcast) Ukraine in Histories and Stories Others: Fiction/Non/Fiction Season 6, Episode 2: “How Dostoevsky's Classic Has Shaped Russia's War in Ukraine, with Explaining Ukraine's Tetyana Ogarkova and Volodymyr Yermolenko” Yaryna Chornohuz "Being a poet and a woman on the frontline - with Yaryna Chornohuz" (Explaining Ukraine) Timothy Snyder "Timothy Snyder: Freedom as a Value and a Task - a Talk in Kyiv" (Explaining Ukraine) Joseph Heller Thomas Pynchon All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque “Guernica” by Pablo Picasso “The Parable of the Old Man and the Young,” by Wilfred Owen “Remembering Ukrainian novelist Victoria Amelina, killed by a Russian missile,” by Joanna Kikissis Kateryna Kalytko Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
El escritor colombiano Héctor Abad que sobrevivió al ataque en Kramatorsk, busca ahora salvaguardar la memoria de Victoria Amelina, escritora ucraniana asesinada por un misil ruso cuando cenaba con él, el pasado mes de junio.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Kudakwashe Vanyoro interviews John Marnell and Alejandra Oliva about their books Seeking Sanctuary and Rivermouth. They deliberate about telling other people's stories, the experiences of LGBTIQ migrants, immigration policies, translation, faith-based organisations and solidarity. Kudakwashe Vanyoro is a lecturer in the Department of Anthropology at Wits University. He is the author of the forthcoming book Migration, Crisis and Temporality at the Zimbabwe-South Africa Border: Governing Immobilities (Bristol University Press, 2024). John Marnell is a Doctoral Researcher at the African Centre for Migration & Society at Wits University. He is the author of Seeking Sanctuary: Stories of Sexuality, Faith and Migration (Wits University Press, 2021) and with B Camminga co-edited Queer and Trans African Mobilities: Migration, Asylum and Diaspora (Zed Books, 2022). Alejandra Oliva is an essayist, embroider, translator and immigrant justice advocate. Her book Rivermouth: A Chronicle of Language, Faith and Migration (Astra House, 2023) received a Whiting Nonfiction Grant. She was the Yale Whitney Humanities Center Franke Visiting Fellow in Spring 2022. In this episode we are in solidarity with Crimean Tatar citizen journalist and human rights defender Server Mustafayev. We call on the authorities in Russia to free him. You can read more about his case here: https://www.pen-international.org/our-campaigns/day-of-the-imprisoned-writer-2022 As tributes to him, John reads “Teach the Nation Poetry” by Stella Nyanzi, Alejandra reads “Like You” by Roque Dalton (translated by Jack Hirschman) and Kuda reads an extract from the book he's writing with his brother, Diaries of Border. PEN South Africa joins the PEN community in mourning the journalists and writers who have been killed in Russia's war on Ukraine, including Ukrainian writer Volodemyr Vakulenko and PEN Ukraine member and human rights defender Victoria Amelina. Read more here: https://www.pen-international.org/news/pen-international-mourns-the-killing-of-victoria-amelina This podcast series is made possible by a grant from the U.S. Embassy in South Africa to promote open conversation and highlight shared histories.
In this episode, David Dylus talks about Read2Tree, a tool that builds alignment matrices and phylogenetic trees from raw sequencing reads. By leveraging the database of orthologous genes called OMA, Read2Tree bypasses traditional, time-consuming steps such as genome assembly, annotation and all-versus-all sequence comparisons. Links: Inference of phylogenetic trees directly from raw sequencing reads using Read2Tree (David Dylus, Adrian Altenhoff, Sina Majidian, Fritz J. Sedlazeck, Christophe Dessimoz) Background story Read2Tree on GitHub OMA browser The Guardian's podcast about Victoria Amelina and Volodymyr Vakulenko If you enjoyed this episode, please consider supporting the podcast on Patreon!
Since the start of the war in Ukraine, more than 280,000 Ukrainians have resettled in the United States. According to Integrated Refugee Immigrant Services, there is roughly 1500 Ukrainian refugees settled in Connecticut. Elected officials here in Connecticut have shown their support for Ukraine. Connecticut Senator Richard Blumenthal has traveled several times since the start of the war to meet with President Zelensky. He has recently introduced a Senate resolution to address the threat Russia poses. And some Connecticut residents have even gone to Ukraine to do what they can to aid the war effort. Today, we talk to Larissa Babij. She is a Ukrainian American that grew up in Manchester, Connecticut. She lives in Kyiv, Ukraine working as a writer and translator. In her newsletter, “A Kind of Refugee” she writes about her life living in a war zone. We also hear from Anna Koblyarz, a resident of Berlin, Connecticut and is raising money for the City of Goodness project, a shelter for women and children in need in Ukraine. GUESTS: Anna Kobylarz: a resident of Berlin, Connecticut and president of the nonprofit Community Help. She is also the Director of the Humanitarian Mission of the Polish American Foundation of Connecticut. Larissa Babij: writer, translator and dancer living in Kyiv, Ukraine. Her newsletter is “A Kind of Refugee.” You can find the Victoria Amelina poem "The Town of Women" here. Where We Live is available as a podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Amazon Music, TuneIn, Listen Notes, or wherever you get your podcasts. Subscribe and never miss an episode.Support the show: http://wnpr.org/donateSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Victoria Amelina was an award-winning novelist. But after Russian forces invaded Ukraine, she began investigating war crimes – including the disappearance of a much-loved children's author. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/infocus
Before she was killed by a Russian missile strike, the acclaimed novelist and war crimes researcher wrote about growing up in Moscow's shadow, and how she came to understand what being Ukrainian really meant. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/longreadpod
In this episode... 01:30 - Ukrainian army attacks the first line of Russian defense in the south while making gains around Bakhmut. Meanwhile, deep attacks take down the Crimean Bridge and an assassination of a Russian submarine commander. 13:30 - An update on the after-effects of the Wagner Coup attempt 20:30 - The NATO Summit in Vilnius proves to be disappointing. 27:00 - Zelensky clashes with Bulgarian President Rumen Radev 30:00 - Zelensky's visit to Poland looks to mend old wounds. 38:30 - Turkey makes big moves to support Ukraine amidst Russia canceling the grain deal. 47:00 - Ukrainian writer Victoria Amelina passes in the hospital after a Russian missile attack in Kramatorsk. 52:40 - Question from the fans on the US sending Ukraine cluster munitions Twitter Anthony: @BartawayRomeo: @RomeoKokriatskiUkraine Without Hype: @HypeUkraine Patreonhttps://www.patreon.com/UkraineWithoutHype Resources and Charitieshttps://linktr.ee/ukrainewithouthype MusicHey Sokoli (Traditional)
Matthew Bannister on Malcolm Mowbray, the British film director best known for making “A Private Function” - the comedy about wartime rationing starring Michael Palin and Maggie Smith. The film's writer Alan Bennett pays tribute. Victoria Amelina, the Ukrainian novelist and war crimes researcher who was killed in a missile strike in Kramatorsk. Roger Lovegrove, the ornithologist who played a leading role in re-introducing red kites to the UK. Mavis Cheek, who wrote humorous novels about middle class marriage and relationships. We're joined by her friend Helen Lederer. Interviewee: Olha Mukha Interviewee: Alan Bennett Interviewee: Joe Mowbray Interviewee: Roy Dennis Interviewee: Helen Lederer Producer: Gareth Nelson-Davies Archive used: Kramatorsk: Russian missile strike hits restaurants in Ukrainian city, Verified Live, BBC World News, 28/06/2023; Victoria Amelina interview recorded 15/05/2023, Copyright Clearance Centre, YouTube uploaded 03/07/2023; Playhouse: Days at the Beach, Director: Malcolm Mowbray, BBC Two, 13/02/1981; Our Winnie, BBC Four, repeated broadcast 10/12/2009; Malcolm Mowbray, London Standard Film Awards, BBC One, 26/01/1986; A Private Function (1984) film promotion, Hand Made Films, YoutTube uploaded 24/05/2019; A Private Function (1984), Hand Made Films, 1984; Roger Lovegrove: Red Kite, The Great British Birdwatch BBC One, 19/06/1989 ; Red Kite sound effects, RSPB, recordist Jens Kirkeby, recorded 17/08/2005; Mavis Cheek interview, Woman's Hour, BBC Radio 4, 04/03/2002; Mavis Cheek reading The Sex Life of My Aunt, Faber and Faber, Arts Archive, Woman's Hour arts book archive website, BBC Radio 4, uploaded 04/03/2002; Mavis Cheek interview and extract reading, Sixty Minutes, BBC One, 26/10/1983.
El reconocido escritor colombiano Héctor Abad Faciolince relató en detalle cómo sobrevivió un ataque con misil, ocurrido el 27 de junio, mientras se encontraba en una popular pizzería en la ciudad ucraniana de Kramatorsk. Abad estaba cenando con otros dos colombianos: el exnegociador de paz Sergio Jaramillo y la periodista Catalina Gómez. También se encontraba en la mesa la escritora ucraniana Victoria Amelina, de 37 años, quien falleció como consecuencia de las heridas derivadas del bombardeo.Para conocer sobre cómo CNN protege la privacidad de su audiencia, visite CNN.com/privacidad
di Massimiliano Coccia | Da oggi e fino al 21 luglio Quarto potere propone una selezione di articoli di Novaya Gazeta Europe. Una partnership importante che vuole valorizzare il lavoro di giornalisti di inchiesta che oppressi dal regime di Putin riescono a raccontare e a portare fuori dalla propaganda puritana informazioni e notizie. Iniziamo con un articolo sui missili russi e gli obiettivi civili e un'inchiesta sulla fabbrica dei troll a Mosca. Un ricordo nel finale della poeta ucraina Victoria Amelina.
This episode is about Victoria Amelina, a Ukrainian writer, and our friend, killed by a Russian missile. Victoria Amelina, a Ukrainian writer and human rights activist, passed away on July 1st, 2023 after she was severely injured by a Russian missile strike on Kramatorsk, Eastern part of Ukraine, Donetsk region, on June 27th. In this episode we will try to tell you her story. And to explain why she has to be remembered, read and translated all over the world. Hosts: Volodymyr Yermolenko, a Ukrainian philosopher and journalist, the chief editor of UkraineWorld, and Tetyana Ogarkova, head of the international outreach at Ukraine Crisis Media Centre. Invited: Tetyana Teren, executive director at PEN Ukraine, and Olena Huseinova, Ukrainian poet, journalist at Radio Kultura. Support the New York Literary Festival founded by Victoria: https://send.monobank.ua/jar/47NC5oddkL Recording from Victoria's last performance: Youtube channel “Look, that is the artist”. Original: https://youtu.be/hpcKldIT0Nw
Schilderijen, wandkleden, collages, theater, films - kunstenaar Felix de Rooy is een alleskunner. In het Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam cureerde Charl Landvreugd een overzichtstentoonstelling van het werk van kunstenaar. Bij Wat blijft spreekt Lara Billie Rense met Landvreugd over de tentoonstelling en het werk van Felix de Rooy. Verder aandacht voor acteur en zanger Willem Nijholt, schrijver Victoria Amelina, zanger Lee Hazlewood, en het nieuwe femicidemonument. Voor de podcastserie Wat blijft maakte Maartje Willems een portret van Rabi Koria, Nederlands-Syrische beeldend kunstenaar. --- Redactie: Nina Ramkisoen, Noah van Diepen, Geerte Verduijn, Maartje Willems, Jessica Zoghary, Hella Dwars Eindredactie: Bram Vollaers
Nueva edición del informativo, hoy hablo sobre la censura cultural en algunos ayuntamientos y sobre la muerte de la escritora ucraniana Victoria Amelina. También encontraréis el ranking de los libros más vendidos. *** Soy Ana Ballabriga, escritora a cuatro manos con David Zaplana de novelas de misterio. Puedes encontrar más información sobre mí en IG @BallabrigaAna
Day 498.Today, we bring you news from Ukraine as the US considers supplying cluster munitions and Zelensky meets European leaders ahead of next week's NATO summit. Plus, we reveal upcoming plans for the podcast. To contact us on this, please email: ukrainepod@telegraph.co.ukContributors:David Knowles (Host). @djknowles22 on Twitter.Dominic Nicholls (Associate Editor, Defence). @DomNicholls on Twitter.Francis Dearnley (Assistant Comment Editor). @FrancisDearnley on Twitter.With a retrospective piece looking back on an earlier interview with the late Ukrainian writer Victoria Amelina.Find out more: Bob Seely MP's article on the 'state of play':https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/07/06/joe-biden-must-not-want-ukraine-to-win/ Dr. Benjamin Tallis's report on security guarantees:https://dgap.org/en/research/publications/security-guarantees-ukraine-0Subscribe to The Telegraph: telegraph.co.uk/ukrainethelatestEmail: ukrainepod@telegraph.co.ukSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
This episode is a tribute to Victoria Amelina, a Ukrainian writer who was killed by a russian missile attack. Tapescript to be found here: https://glmgroupe.wordpress.com/ukrainian-for-language-enthusiasts/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/glmgroupe/message
La giovane scrittrice ucraina uccisa mentre provava a dire e diffondere la verità sull'invasione russa. Svetlana Aleksievič scrive in russo il più grande monumento alla verità del nostro tempo.Svetlana Aleksievič, "Opere", BompianiTimbuctu è un podcast del Post condotto da Marino Sinibaldi Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
durée : 00:03:09 - Géopolitique - par : Pierre Haski - Victoria Amelina avait 37 ans. Elle était poétesse, écrivaine, essayiste. Elle est morte dans le bombardement du restaurant de Kramatorsk. Depuis l'invasion russe, elle enquêtait sur les crimes de guerre et prenait sa part de risque. A l'image de beaucoup dans la société ukrainienne.
El escritor colombiano habló en 6Am sobre la sentida muerte de la ucraniana Victoria Amelina, quien falleció producto de un bombardeo ruso contra un restaurante
Per giorni il paese è stato attraversato da manifestazioni che hanno portato nelle strade migliaia di persone, con scontri molto violenti con la polizia. Il 27 giugno due razzi russi hanno colpito un ristorante pieno di persone a Kramatorsk, in Ucraina, uccidendo 13 persone tra cui una famosa scrittrice. Brune Seban, traduttrice, da ParigiOlga Tokariuk, giornalista ucrainaYaryna Grusha, docente di ucraino e traduttriceVideo Francia: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yelw912aIqoVideo Victoria Amelina: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l-4lV0PQj-E&t=133s Scrivi a podcast@internazionale.it o manda un vocale a +39 3347063050Consulenza editoriale di Chiara Nielsen.Produzione di Claudio Balboni.Musiche di Tommaso Colliva e Raffaele Scogna.Direzione creativa di Jonathan Zenti.
durée : 00:03:09 - Géopolitique - par : Pierre Haski - Victoria Amelina avait 37 ans. Elle était poétesse, écrivaine, essayiste. Elle est morte dans le bombardement du restaurant de Kramatorsk. Depuis l'invasion russe, elle enquêtait sur les crimes de guerre et prenait sa part de risque. A l'image de beaucoup dans la société ukrainienne.
Entrevista en Noticias CaracolSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The award-winning Ukrainian writer Victoria Amelina has died from her injuries after a Russian missile hit a pizza restaurant in the eastern city of Kramatorsk on Tuesday, where she was eating. Journalist Christina Lamb was a friend of Victoria's – she tells Nuala about her and the impact her death has had. Half of prison officers in England and Wales do not feel safe at work, according to a recent large-scale survey. Alex South spent 10 years working as a prison officer, and she's written a book, Behind These Doors, about her experiences. She speaks to Nuala about working in such a male-dominated environment and shares her stories. Up-and-coming actor Beth Alsbury takes the lead role in a new TV drama called Blindspot, which will be on our screens this week. Beth plays Hannah, who thinks she witnesses a potential murder, but struggles to get the local detective, played by Ross Kemp, to take her seriously. Beth joins Nuala to talk about going straight from drama school to set. On Holocaust Memorial Day earlier this year, Woman's Hour featured an audio series about young girls who'd come to the UK on the Kindertransport and lived in Tynemouth and the Lake District. A photograph used on BBC Sounds for the series featured three young girls, one whose identity was ‘unknown'. A listener told us the ‘unknown' girl was her mother, Hanna Singer. Her two daughters tell Nuala what happened next. The National Portrait Gallery has just reopened with an exhibition of the life and career of Yevonde, the pioneering London photographer who spearheaded the use of colour photography in the 1930s. Also open at the Photographer's Gallery is another exhibition of an influential female photographer, Evelyn Hofer, famous for documenting the lives of ordinary people, places, environments and objects. The curators of both exhibitions, Clare Freestone and Clare Grafik, tell Nuala why the contributions these women made may have been overlooked. Presenter: Nuala McGovern Producer: Lottie Garton
The latest on the violence in the West Bank with Julie Norman, associate professor in politics and international relations at University College London. In the studio, Terry Stiastny and Ian Bond discuss the EU's approach to Russian assets, why France and Germany have fallen out of love and how ‘Barbie' has become an unlikely agitator in Vietnam. Plus: a tribute to Ukrainian author Victoria Amelina and New Zealand's Martin Phillipps serenades Monocle's Andrew Mueller. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
37-year-old Victoria Amelina, one of Ukraine's best-known young writers, died from injuries from a Russian missile strike in the city of Kramatorsk on June 27. In memoriam we rebroadcast her Ukraine 2 4 2 interview with Anne Levine from last May.Victoria Amelina stopped writing novels when Russia invaded Ukraine, saying: in 2022, it became impossible to write fiction (because) reality is so much more intense; it is impossible to invent stories anymore.Prior to her death she worked as a war crimes researcher with the organization TRUTH HOUNDS.In the Izium region, Victoria Amelina uncovered the war diary of fellow Ukrainian writer Volodymyr Vakulenko, who buried the dairy before he was killed by the occupying forces. She found it with the aid of his father in the back yard of the family home.Amelina kept a journal of the work being done by war-crimes researchers and became a successful poet published by papers such as the New York Times, and various anthologies.Victoria Amelina was a celebrated Ukrainian author of novels and children's books since 2015, when she won several literary awards for her first book, The Fall Syndrome, about the events at Maidan in 2014. In 2017 her novel Doms Dream Kingdom was released and was shortlisted for the prestigious LitAkcent literary award and the European Union Prize for Literature in 2019.
Victoria Amelina, écrivaine engagée ukrainienne Roger Federer, 5e membre de Coldplay Hipgnosis, le duo qui a révolutionné lʹhistoire de la musique en images
En 'Más de uno' hablamos con una de las víctimas del ataque a una pizzería en Ucrania hace dos días, Héctor Abad Faciolince, que cuenta cómo se encuentra, la escritora ucraniana Victoria Amelina, que resultó herida en el ataque.
En 'Más de uno' hablamos con una de las víctimas del ataque a una pizzería en Ucrania hace dos días, Héctor Abad Faciolince, que cuenta cómo se encuentra, la escritora ucraniana Victoria Amelina, que resultó herida en el ataque.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4412383/advertisement
El escritor colombiano habló en 6AM tras haber sido víctima de un bombardeo en una pizzería mientras estaba con el poeta Héctor Abad. Confirmó que se encuentran bien de salud, pero su compañera Victoria Amelina está en estado crítico por una lesión en el cráneo, causada probablemente por vidrios y vigas que volaron.
El escritor colombiano habló en 6AM tras haber sido víctima de un bombardeo en una pizzería mientras estaba con el poeta Héctor Abad. Confirmó que se encuentran bien de salud, pero su compañera Victoria Amelina está en estado crítico por una lesión en el cráneo, causada probablemente por vidrios y vigas que volaron.
A conversation with Renowned Ukrainian author Victoria Amelina who has stopped writing novels. She says,“in 2022, it became impossible to write fiction (because) reality is so much more intense; it is impossible to invent stories anymore.” She now works as a war crimes researcher with the organization TRUTH HOUNDS.In the Izium region, Victoria Amelina uncovered the war diary of fellow Ukrainian writer Volodymyr Vakulenko, who buried the diary before he was killed by the occupying forces. She found it with the aid of his father in the backyard of the family home.Amelina now also keeps a journal of the work being done by war-crimes researchers and she has become a successful poet published by papers such as the New York Times, and various anthologies.Victoria Amelina has been a celebrated Ukrainian author of novels and children's books since 2015, when she won several literary awards for her first book, The Fall Syndrome, about the events at Maidan in 2014. In 2017 her novel Doms Dream Kingdom was released and was shortlisted for the prestigious LitAkcent literary award and the European Union Prize for Literature in 2019. Amelina is a member of PEN International.
As an author, publisher, and organizer of festivals and reading, the late Volodymyr Vakulenko had many roles in Ukrainian publishing, Ukrainian novelist Victoria Amelina explains.
Day 417. Today, we discuss the sentencing of Kremlin critic Vladimir Kara-Murza, analyse criticism of Russian elites from Wagner's leader Yevgheny Prighozin and welcome to our London studio Ukrainian writer and war crimes researcher Victoria Amelina.Contributors:David Knowles (Host). @djknowles22 on Twitter.James Kilner (Foreign Correspondent). @JKJourno on Twitter. Victoria Amelina (Writer & War Crimes Researcher). @vamelina on Twitter. To support our work, subscribe to The Telegraph: telegraph.co.uk/ukrainethelatestEmail: ukrainepod@telegraph.co.ukSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Day 272. Today, as temperatures in Kyiv drop below freezing we discuss Russian war crimes; the EU's new assistance package to Ukraine; and the memory and legacy of Euromaidan, which started just over 9 years ago.Contributors: David Knowles (Host). @DJKnowles22 on Twitter.Dominic Nicholls (Associate Editor). @DomNicholls on Twitter.Francis Dearnley (Assistant Comment Editor). @FrancisDearnley on Twitter.With thanks to Victoria Amelina. @vamelinaSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
This week Ryan spoke to historian Donal Fallon who explored the streets of an ever-changing Dublin, writer Sophie White on her new novel, Where I end, a woman who has dedicated her life to helping others to help themselves, Ukrainian journalist, Victoria Amelina, and the man behind the recent discovery of Ernest Shackleton's ship, the Endurance.
Ukrainian journalist Victoria Amelina joins Ryan in studio.
Joining Mitchell Kaplan from Ukraine is Marjana Savka and Victoria Amelina, with Askold Melnyczuk in Boston. Marjana Savka was born in Kopychyntsi, Ternopil oblast, in 1973. She published her first poetry collection, Naked Riverbeds, at the age of twenty-one. Eight other books, for which she received several awards, have appeared since then, including four poetry collections and three children's books. A former actress and journalist, she edited We and She, an anthology of poems by female writers from Lviv, Ukraine, where she lives. She cofounded, with her husband, the Old Lion Publishing House. Marjana is the winner of “Torch” award (1998) and the International Vasyl Stus Prize (2003). Victoria Amelina is an award-winning writer living in Ukraine and the US. She was born in 1986 in the city of Lviv, Ukraine. Before becoming a writer, she worked in high tech as an engineering manager; she holds an MS degree in Computer Science. In 2014 she became a laureate of the Ukrainian National Literary Award Koronatsiya Slova, and released her debut novel “Fall Syndrome, or Homo Compatiens” that was shortlisted as one of the best books of the year according to the LitAkcent and Valerii Shevchuk literary awards. Her second novel “Home for Dom” won the Best Prose Book award at Zaporizhya Book Festival, and was shortlisted for numerous awards including LitAkcent Book of the Year, Lviv City of UNESCO Literary Award, and European Union Prize for Literature. Askold Melnyczuk's book of stories, The Man Who Would Not Bow, appeared in 2021. His four novels have variously been named a New York Times Notable, an LA Times Best Books of the Year, and an Editor's Choice by the American Library Association's Booklist. He is also co-editor of From Three Worlds, an anthology of Ukrainian Writers. His published translations include work by Oksana Zabuzhko, Marjana Savka, Bohdan Boychuk, and Ivan Drach. His shorter work, including essays, stories, and reviews, have appeared in The Threepenny Review, The New York Times, The Boston Globe, The Times Literary Supplement (London), The Los Angeles Times, The Harvard Review and elsewhere. He's received a three-year Lila Wallace-Readers' Digest Award in Fiction, the McGinnis Award in Fiction, and the George Garret Award from AWP for his contributions to the literary community. As founding editor of Agni he received PEN's Magid Award for creating “one of America's, and the world's, leading literary journals.” Founding editor of Arrowsmith Press, he has taught at Boston University, Harvard, Bennington College and currently teaches at the University of Massachusetts, Boston. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices