Free Thinking Episodes Episode guide
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Hay Festival: PJ O'Rourke, Steven D Levitt, Stephen J Dubner
PJ O'Rourke and writers of Freakonomics join Rana Mitter at the 2015 Hay Festival.
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Cities, Export of Empire, India's New Story
Rana Mitter and Tristram Hunt on how Britain's empire gave shape to today's global cities.
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Essay writing, Tim Winton
Anne McElvoy looks at the resurgence of non-fiction writing and the essay as a form.
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Writers and their notebooks
Lawrence Norfolk, AS Byatt, Wendy Cope, Bidisha and David Mitchell on writers' notebooks.
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John Clare, Jimmy Wales and the Right to be Forgotten, Borowczyk Retrospective
Iain Sinclair talks to Matthew Sweet about a walk to mark John Clare's death 150 years ago
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Nick Payne's Incognito, Penny Dreadful on TV, Helen McCarthy and Baroness Neville-Jones on Female Diplomats
Anne McElvoy talks about the brain to Nick Payne; Victorian Gothic on TV in Penny Dreadful
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Ivan Klima, the East-West divide in Europe, Science Fiction in Theatre
Philip Dodd talks to Czech novelist Ivan Klima and asks if Europe always needs an East.
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Godzilla and Hayao Miyazaki, Simon Armitage's version of The Iliad
Matthew Sweet reviews Godzilla and The Wind Rises, plus Lily Cole in The Last Days of Troy
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Representing cities - in politics and plays
Anne McElvoy looks at how cities are represented in politics and in theatre.
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Eleanor Marx, David Henry Hwang
Philip Dodd meets playwright David Henry Hwang, plus Rachel Holmes discusses Eleanor Marx.
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Charles Kingsley's Water Babies, Edward St Aubyn
Matthew Sweet discusses Charles Kingsley and is joined by writer Edward St Aubyn.
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Thom Gunn's Poetry, Michael Cunningham
Samira Ahmed discusses the poems of Thom Gunn, who died in 2004.
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The Radiophonic Workshop
Matthew Sweet meets members of the 麻豆官网首页入口 Radiophonic Workshop.
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Eighteenth-Century Sexual Politics
Philip Dodd explores the sexual mores of 18th-century England.
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Stealing Banksy? Vice Media, Chris Marker Profile
Samira Ahmed asks who owns street art, and whether it should be up for sale.
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Dame Janet Suzman
Actress and director Dame Janet Suzman is in extended conversation with Philip Dodd.
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18th-Century Crime and Punishment
Philip Dodd explores 18th-century attitudes to the law, crime and punishment.
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Mandeville's View of 18th-Century Economics
Matthew Sweet on the lessons about finance outlined in Mandeville's Fable of the Bees.
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18th-Century Power Politics
With Anne McElvoy. Historians including Amanda Foreman on 18th-century monarchy and power.
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Are We Living Through a New 18th Century?
Philip Dodd explores the parallels between the 18th-century London and now.
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Originality
Nicholas Penny, Simon Stephens and Geoff Mulgan join Philip Dodd to discuss originality.
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Betty Balfour Profile, James Lovelock, Peter Buwalda
Lucy Porter and Bryony Dixon profile silent film star Betty Balfour with Matthew Sweet.
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Is War Good for Us?
Anne McElvoy explores the impact of war, Afghan elections and childhood violence.
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Orhan Pamuk
Orhan Pamuk talks to Philip Dodd about his writing career and his views of modern Turkey.
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Policing: Fact and Fiction
Matthew Sweet explores depictions of policing and corruption with playwright Roy Williams.
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Live at Southbank Centre: Contemporary Curating, World Thinkers, The Language of Peace
With Anne McElvoy on displaying art and design, World Thinkers and the language of peace.
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Live at Southbank Centre: EM Forster
South African novelist Damon Galgut joins Rana Mitter to discuss the career of EM Forster.
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Landmark: Seven Samurai
Matthew Sweet and guests including Ian Christie and SF Said on Kurosawa's Seven Samurai.
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Live at Southbank Centre: A Charm Offensive
Stephen Bayley, Rachel Johnson, AL Kennedy and Philip Dodd discuss what we mean by charm.
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Live at Southbank Centre: Childhood
Frank Field MP joins Philip Dodd for a discussion about different aspects of childhood.