Tuesday, December 22, 2009

8 podcasts I listened to

Exploring Environmental History - Jan Oosthoek speaks with Christian Pfister about the memory of extreme weather conditions. As memories are culturally determined, so are the data as historic sources deliver them to us. He argues that with cultural interpretation valuable data can be salvaged from the sources that would otherwise be discarded as scientifically untrustworthy. (site)

Norman Centuries - had a short edition about Richard the good. This is a podcast by history podcast veteran Lars Brownworth. (site)

In Our Time - BBC's excellent program about the history of ideas. Since my last review this weekly pprogram has continued with one jewel after another. Especially noteworthy are the issues about The Silk Road, about Pythagoras, radiation and Schopenauer. (site)

Religious Studies (Berkeley) - This is an introduction by Niklaus Largier about the development of Christian Theology. It should have been called Christian Studies, by the way. I tend to pick out lectures that address figures I want to know more about. Here I want to recommend the lecture about Luther - lecture 11. (site)

Hardcore History - Dan Carlin's very special podcast about history. Carlin is an artist in telling history. If you have problems listening to the latest issue (Suffer the children - about the history of children), delete the chapter, unsubscribe and resubscribe to the new feed. You will get a fixed version. (site, feed)

Dante (Yale) - Professor Guiseppe Mazzotta promises to take us through Dante's Divine Comedy (in English translation). I have heard the first lecture and plan to continue. (site)

History of India - I have reminded you before of UCLA's course by Vinay Lal, but here is another reason to do it again. A blog about the History of India (Varnam) produced a commentary regarding the Saraswati controversy. He disagrees with Lal that the 'Saraswati hypothesis' is held by Hindu nationalists only.

Ersatz TV - Last but not least, there was a new vodcast issue of Ersatz TV.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Five free university lecture sites

New readers to the blog and especially those that are new to podcasting tend to ask me where they can find podcasts themselves. A long time a go, I have written a post about my sources, but this is not one I have been updating all the time. So, here I want to give you a five sites to go to, to find university lecture series for yourself.

There are more universities than these five that offer their lectures on-line. If you go to iTunes U and check the list of Universities and Colleges, you will be surprised to find scores upon scores of institutions that share their educational content. However, not all audio players can handle the formats offered and not all of the offered content is of the same consistent quality. So let me begin to limit you to these five: Berkeley, Yale, UC San Diego, UCLA and Stanford.

Number one is Berkeley which as been offering free courses on podcast and vodcast for years. All the material is still available, going as far back as 2001. All conceivable disciplinary fields are covered. Among others are indisputable classics such as History 5 (European Civilization from the Renaissance to the Present) and Descriptive Physics (aka Physics for future presidents). Most courses are offered in formats every player can handle

Fewer courses are available at Yale, but the quality is persistent and high and all in regular format.

UC San Diego (UCSD) offers a large amount every semester as Berkeley does and also these podcasts are in regular mp3 format. However, UCSD has two major drawbacks you have to keep in mind: the lectures are no edited and therefore contain inconvenient silences and abrupt starts and stops. Also, lectures are removed at the end of the semester. Yet, this is compensated by splendid lecturers such as Victor Magagna and Matthew Herbst.

UCLA's course list is also extremely long and varied and also goes back quite a number of years. Not all courses are publicly available though. You can identify those with the padlock icon.

Stanford has little but great material just like Yale. Yet, Stanford is one of those many institutions that are mainly reachable through iTunes U only and this means occasionally strictly Apple format for the content. Yet, some of this stuff is splendid like the Historical Jesus and the History of the International System and Stem Cells policy and ethics and Global Geopolitics and Hannibal.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Current listening overview

Here is another summary post concerning what I have been listening to of late.

Philosophy Bites - Several new issues of this wonderful concise philosophy show have become available since the last review. I have listened to the interview with Jeff McMahan about killing in war. This takes on a specific aspect of the problem of just war.

From Israelite to Jew - A very good amateur podcast about the history of Jewry since the beginning of the second temple period. With the last two issues we have been informed about the 1 Century CE and its main chronicler, Josephus.

Formations of Art - An informative and entertaining art history lecture series at UCSD with William Bryson. Be quick to download these lectures if you want them, because UCSD will very soon take them off line.

History of India - UCLA history lecture series with Vinay Lal.

European Civilization - Yale's modern history series with John Merriman. I have finished this series and the surprises in the last lecture are Merriman's verdict over the petty bourgeois - blaming them for that went wrong in the last 150 years. And the fact that the series continued beyond 1945.

In other languages I have continued to listen to:

Hoorspel Bommel - Dutch Audio drama

Ronflonflon avec Jacques Plafond - Dutch radio satire

Veertien Achttien - Outstanding Dutch series about WW1

Volkis Stimme - On occasion of Advent a special series of this news satire in German

Making History with Ran Levi - Excellent Hebrew podcast about the history of science and technology

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Anne is a Man! -- Hot Tips

A writer's block for the blog, a blog block as it were, is still bothering me. In the mean time, I am listening to podcasts as usual, which means I owe you a whole lot of reviews. Will I ever get round to them? I wouldn't know, but I can at least give you some quick hot tips.

The Memory Palace - two great new issues since my last review (site, feed)

Introduction to Theory of Literature with Professor Paul H. Fry (Yale) - An English course at Open Yale. (site, feed)

New Books in History - Every interview in this series is worth a recommendation. There were four new chapters I listened to since my last review. Each one of them is worth a mention. Rebecca Manley about the fate of refugees inside the Soviet Union during WW2; Michaela Hoenicke with a study about American views on Nazi Germany before the war and implicitly about her own struggles with German identity; Benjamin Binstock about reconstructing art history by example of the Dutch painter Vermeer; Sarah Ross about female intellectuals in the Renaissance with among others Christin de Pisan, whose City of Women I read some twenty years ago.

the New York Review of Books podcast had a fascinating interview with Andrew O'Hagan about Samuel Johnson. (site)

UChannel Podcast - with a lecture about a new Israel Lobby; Jeremy Ben Ami explains how the main stream, moderate Jews in the US as well as Israel have been excluded from the regular Israel Lobby on Capitol Hill. The alternative is his own J-Street. (site)

Entitled Opinions - with both challenging and thought provoking chapters about Borges, Plato and Machiavelli. (site)

Death with Professor Shelly Kagan (Yale) - a very promising philosophy course in Open Yale. I am still at the first lectures which explore the arguments around the existence of the soul, which means that until this point there is more talk about the essence of human beings and their identity than about their death. (site, feed)

Monday, December 14, 2009

Podularity - books, writers, interviews

Here is a new podcast that I have begun to explore: Podularity. (feed) In the podcast, the host George Miller interviews writers about their books which lie in the broad category of non-fiction. A glance at the backlog (about 20 episodes) indicates a variety of subjects as large as those on my blog.

The last issue in the list dates from last month and it has been anounced that the next show will be with Hilary Mantel, the Booker Prize Winner. This interview will possibly bring the show to the world of fiction as well - we shal see. So far, I picked from the list an issue about the Huns, one about Indus Empires and the last one about Berlin. Each of these was a delight; highly recommended.

The Berlin issue saw an interview with Heather Reyes about a highly original guide to the city of Berlin. Not only good for lovers of Berlin, but also of literature. The Huns issue was an interview with Christopher Kelly who wrote a biography of Attila the Hun. More than a book about Attila, the person, it is about the people and phenomenon of the Huns and it gives the history buffs (such as myself) some precious facts about them. And lastly, Miller interviewed Alice Albinia who wrote about her travel experiences in the Indus Valley and her book that discussed the numerous empires that have ruled in the Indus.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

The myth of work - LSE

Yet another fascinating talk appeared in the LSE podcast. Alain de Botton spoke about The Pleasures and Sorrows of Work. A talk touching not on the economist's meaning of employment, but rather a more sociology and philosophy approach, with a tad of history and psychology implications - amazing and exceptional in the LSE series.

De Botton begins with pointing out that our modern ethos of work is hardly as old as humanity. It is modern phenomenon that began to develop, more or less together with industrialization. Work has become specialized and what is more important, one of the central and meaningful aspects of life. Work has acquired meaning, together with love, that mean for the modern individual the the fulfillment of his life and his dreams. Your work is your identity, your job should bring you the existential satisfaction you log for and so on.

De Botton, who is a writer and a philosopher, made study of work, especially the 'tedious' jobs that are not likely to induce existential satisfaction but that are critical for modern economy. His talk reconstructs how work is overrated and expectations are exaggerated (just as with love and relationships) and what are the consequences of the myth of work. It is only in his last words work gets some esteem, other than that he seems to drive us more towards the the classic idea that work, basically is a kind of slavery. Goodness. Are we all slaves?

More LSE:
Pasts and futures of Christianity,
Global capitalism - the Gray view,
Israeli at the London School of Economics,
Michael Sandel,
Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung.