World War One

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 35:11:09
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Sinopsis

The events of the first truly global war and its devastating and far reaching impact.

Episodios

  • Minds at War - Paths of Glory

    06/07/2014 Duración: 13min

    CRW Nevinson's painting Paths of Glory is a distant cry from the rallying recruitment posters that appeared at the start of the war. It depicts the bloated corpses of two dead soldiers, stretched out in the mud, against a backdrop of tangled barbed wire somewhere on the Western Front. Unsurprisingly, it was censored at the time. Allan Little considers the continuing power of Nevinson's painting and the role of art both in recruiting soldiers and in denouncing war.

  • Free Thinking - Oh What A Lovely Savas

    05/07/2014 Duración: 43min

    'Oh what a lovely Savas' begins Rana Mitter in this edition of Free Thinking, using the Turkish word for War. Rana and guests discuss the roles of Turkey, India, China and Japan in World War I, and how the very legitimacy of the idea of Empire was possibly the biggest ideological casualty of WW1.

  • Free Thinking - Wood and Trees: War and Remembrance

    04/07/2014 Duración: 44min

    From Paul Nash paintings of blasted tree stumps in the first world war to today's commemorative planting: Paul Gough, Gabriel Hemery and Gail Ritchie join Samira Ahmed to explore woods in war and peacetime.

  • Free Thinking - Balancing Power in WW1 and Now

    03/07/2014 Duración: 43min

    The First World War shattered the power balance in Europe. As we confront an uncertain world order, who are the great powers today, how has their role changed and where do they now stand in determining geo-politics? Jonathan Powell and historians Margaret MacMillan, Orlando Figes and Adam Tooze explore the Great Powers with Anne McElvoy.

  • Free Thinking - The Thirty-Nine Steps

    02/07/2014 Duración: 44min

    John Buchan's The Thirty-Nine Steps first appeared in Blackwoods Magazine in August and September 1915 and depicts Europe on the edge of war in May and June 1914. It quickly became popular reading in the trenches and on the home front, and 100 years and three film adaptations later, its popularity is enduring. Matthew Sweet talks to biographer Andrew Lownie and scholars Dr Michael Redley and Dr Kate Macdonald about the connections between Buchan's own war experience and The 39 Steps, and to Professors Elleke Boehmer and Terence Ranger about how ideas about empire and adventure play out in the novel.

  • Gavrilo Princip's Footprint

    01/07/2014 Duración: 44min

    On the sunny morning of June 28 1914, Gavrilo Princip shot dead the Archduke Ferdinand and his wife Sophie in Sarajevo. Their assassination began a chain of events that would bring the world to war, destroy three empires and lead to the creation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. Maria Margaronis travels to Belgrade and Sarajevo to unravel the many meanings of Princip then and now, discovering that Princip's past and present remain deeply contested, as current attempts to commemorate both his deeds and his memory book-end a century of conflict.

  • Sound of Cinema - The First World War

    30/06/2014 Duración: 23min

    Matthew Sweet looks at music for films set against the background of WW1, including Joseph Kosma's music for Jean Renoir's masterpiece La Grande Illusion. The First World War prompted a cinematic response even before the War was over and has continued to exercise the film maker's imagination ever since. From Charles Chaplin's Shoulder Arms in 1918 to Steven Spielberg's recent War Horse, stories and commentaries are varied and include some of the great moments in film and film-music.

  • Nationalism The War That Changed the World

    30/06/2014 Duración: 50min

    An epic exploration of the legacy of World War One begins with this panel and audience discussion from Sarajevo. It looks at the drive for nationhood during World War One and its impact on nationalism in Bosnia to this day.

  • Music Matters - The Legacy of WW1 in Music

    29/06/2014 Duración: 23min

    How did composers such as Ralph Vaughan Williams, Alban Berg and Maurice Ravel react to the horrific tragedy of the First World War? Tom Service discusses the effect of World War One on music written in the years following the conflict.

  • Month of Madness - London

    27/06/2014 Duración: 13min

    Professor Christopher Clark unpicks the complex sequence of events that led to WW1. Today, how British decision-makers reacted in the 'July Crisis' of 1914.

  • Month of Madness - The French in St Petersburg

    26/06/2014 Duración: 13min

    Christopher Clark continues to unpick the complex sequence of events during the 1914 'July Crisis'. In this programme, Clark explores the dangerous impact of the extension of the Franco-Russian alliance.

  • Month of Madness - Berlin

    25/06/2014 Duración: 13min

    Christopher Clark unpicks the complex sequence of events during the 'July Crisis' of 1914. In this programme, why Germany issued a 'blank cheque' to Austria-Hungary for war against Serbia.

  • Month of Madness - Vienna

    24/06/2014 Duración: 13min

    Christopher Clark continues to unpick the complex sequence of events leading to WW1. In this programme, how Vienna reacted to the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand.

  • Month of Madness - Sarajevo

    23/06/2014 Duración: 13min

    Prof Christopher Clark unpicks the complex sequence of events that led to the First World War. In the first programme, he travels to Sarajevo to tell the story of extraordinary chances that led to the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand.

  • WW1 At Home 12 - The Football Icon and The War Poet

    17/06/2014 Duración: 19min

    The football coach and Derby County football icon stranded in Berlin during World War One and the war poet who wrote in his native Lincolnshire dialect.

  • WW1 At Home 11 - The 'White Feather' Campaign & a Popular WW1 French Tipple

    06/06/2014 Duración: 16min

    The birth of the 'White Feather' campaign in Folkestone, the pill boxes built to repel the German army, and a World War One tipple from French that’s still enjoyed in Burnley today.

  • WW1 At Home 10 - Medical Breakthroughs & the 'Chocolate Soldier'

    31/05/2014 Duración: 15min

    Medical innovation from a wartime surgeon, a soldier's satirical spin on World War One, and how a chocolate bar inspired a unique correspondence between a child from Cornwall and a soldier at the Front.

  • WW1 At Home 9 - Wartime Drunkeness & a Belgian Refugee's Tale

    23/05/2014 Duración: 13min

    The wartime experiment that aimed to tackle drunkenness in Carlisle, the grandson of Belgium refugees discovers more about his roots, and the story of a Welsh land girl's memories of the city.

  • WW1 At Home 8 - Conscientious Objectors

    15/05/2014 Duración: 17min

    The 'Winchester Whisperer' – the secret newspaper produced by the Conscientious Objectors of Winchester Prison, imprisoned for refusing to take up arms and fight.

  • WW1 At Home 7 - The Hartlepool Bombardment & the Glasgow Rent Protests

    13/05/2014 Duración: 12min

    The first attack on British soil for centuries, the Govan woman who battled for a fair rent for tenants in Glasgow, and the egg collectors of Shropshire who helped alleviate the food crisis.

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