What Does the Future Hold?

Episode 5: Running in the Dark with Michael Crawley

33 min · 12 de oct de 2023
portada del episodio Episode 5: Running in the Dark with Michael Crawley

Descripción

In this episode, social anthropologist Michael Crawley thinks about the impact of technological advancement and ‘cyborgification’ in the world of athletics. There are limits on what we consider humanly possible, but those limits are increasingly being challenged and changed. Focusing on the research for his new book about endurance, Michael asks: at what point do athletic achievements become less about the athletes and more about the technologies that facilitate their success? And what implications does this have on what it means to be human? Read the episode transcript here. [https://newwritingnorth.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Michael-Crawley_TRANSCRIPT.pdf] Produced for Durham Book Festival with support from Durham University. Presented and directed by Lucie McNeil. Find out more about the project here. [https://newwritingnorth.com/journal/what-does-the-future-hold/]

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6 episodios

episode Episode 6: Resisting Reconciliation with Nayanika Mookherjee artwork

Episode 6: Resisting Reconciliation with Nayanika Mookherjee

In the final episode of this series, we hear from Professor of Political Anthropology Nayanika Mookherjee. Nayanika joins us from home to talk about her work around post-conflict reconciliation. Expectations of forgiveness often make it incumbent upon survivors to reconcile and seek closure as an exhibition of ‘moving on’ for a ‘happy’ future – but what if this fails to address injustice? Drawing on her recently published book On Irreconciliation [https://www.wiley.com/en-gb/On+Irreconciliation-p-9781119933267], Nayanika examines the need to not forgive as a political stance, and how irreconciliation can create an indeterminate future – or ‘frozenness’. Read the episode transcript here. [https://newwritingnorth.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Nayanika-Mookherjee_TRANSCRIPT.pdf] Produced for Durham Book Festival with support from Durham University. Presented and directed by Lucie McNeil. Find out more about the project here. [https://newwritingnorth.com/journal/what-does-the-future-hold/]

12 de oct de 202328 min
episode Episode 5: Running in the Dark with Michael Crawley artwork

Episode 5: Running in the Dark with Michael Crawley

In this episode, social anthropologist Michael Crawley thinks about the impact of technological advancement and ‘cyborgification’ in the world of athletics. There are limits on what we consider humanly possible, but those limits are increasingly being challenged and changed. Focusing on the research for his new book about endurance, Michael asks: at what point do athletic achievements become less about the athletes and more about the technologies that facilitate their success? And what implications does this have on what it means to be human? Read the episode transcript here. [https://newwritingnorth.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Michael-Crawley_TRANSCRIPT.pdf] Produced for Durham Book Festival with support from Durham University. Presented and directed by Lucie McNeil. Find out more about the project here. [https://newwritingnorth.com/journal/what-does-the-future-hold/]

12 de oct de 202333 min
episode Episode 4: Planning for the Next Pandemic with Hannah Brown artwork

Episode 4: Planning for the Next Pandemic with Hannah Brown

In the post covid-19 era, it is clearer than ever that we need to think about how to manage a future that includes epidemic and pandemic diseases. Professor Hannah Brown is determined to ensure that any future responses consider the full breadth of research and insight into previous epidemics, and that anthropologists have a seat at the table when it comes to making those decisions. Hannah talks about the importance of detail – of looking at the whole picture, identifying ‘blind spots’ and using past learning to plan as best we can for the future. Read the episode transcript here. [https://newwritingnorth.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Hannah-Brown_TRANSCRIPT.pdf] Produced for Durham Book Festival with support from Durham University. Presented and directed by Lucie McNeil. Find out more about the project here. [https://newwritingnorth.com/journal/what-does-the-future-hold/]

12 de oct de 202321 min
episode Episode 3: Painting a Sustainable City with Felix Ringel artwork

Episode 3: Painting a Sustainable City with Felix Ringel

What does a sustainable urban future look like? Social anthropologist Felix Ringel has spent years studying the urban communities of post-industrial cities in Germany – communities who have first needed to regain a sense of future, before then looking at what work might be necessary to make those futures a reality. Hope is useful, but we need determination too. In this episode, Felix tells us about passionate youth councils, imaginative planning, and how local people turned an entire apartment block into a work of collective art – before the bulldozers arrived. Read the episode transcript here. [https://newwritingnorth.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Felix-Ringel_TRANSCRIPT.pdf] Produced for Durham Book Festival with support from Durham University. Presented and directed by Lucie McNeil. Find out more about the project here. [https://newwritingnorth.com/journal/what-does-the-future-hold/]

12 de oct de 202334 min
episode Episode 2: The Telling Life of Trees with Kate Hampshire artwork

Episode 2: The Telling Life of Trees with Kate Hampshire

Professor of Anthropology Kate Hampshire is working with chainsaw operators in the North East of England: foresters and arborists who cut trees for a living. In this episode, she explores the concepts of time which are deeply interwoven in the life of trees and the practice of tree surgery. Reflecting on her hands-on research in the field (or in this case, woodland), Kate asks how we might hold the future in the face of existential uncertainty about our species and our planet. Read the episode transcript here. [https://newwritingnorth.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Kate-Hampshire_TRANSCRIPT.pdf] Please note that this interview was recorded before the illegal felling took place at Sycamore Gap. Produced for Durham Book Festival with support from Durham University. Presented and directed by Lucie McNeil. Find out more about the project here. [https://newwritingnorth.com/journal/what-does-the-future-hold/]

12 de oct de 202321 min