Start the Week show

Start the Week

Summary: Start The Week sets the cultural agenda for the week ahead, with high-profile guests discussing the ideas behind their work in the fields of art, literature, film, science, history, society and politics.

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Podcasts:

 STW: Roy Williams, Sam Bain, Jennifer Brown and Christian Plowman - 7th April 2014 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 42:03

Tom Sutcliffe looks at both the reality of police life and its portrayal. The playwright Roy Williams's latest drama is set in a police station in Kingston, Jamaica, revealing a world of corruption and intrigue. TV writer Sam Bain, of Peep Show fame, talks about Babylon, a drama which take a wry look at modern policing. The former police officer Christian Plowman explains what life was like undercover, and the criminologist Jennifer Brown looks back at the history of policing in the UK.

 STW: David Sedaris, A.L.Kennedy, Simon Blackburn and Lavinia Greenlaw 31st March | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 42:06

Tom Sutcliffe talks to A.L.Kennedy about her latest collection of short stories of love and hurt. The poet Lavinia Greenlaw retells the tragic love story of Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde. The philosopher Simon Blackburn unpicks the idea of self-love from the myth of Narcissus to today's tv hair adverts: 'because you're worth it', while the humorist David Sedaris uses his own life and loves as the focus of his writing. Producer: Katy Hickman.

 STW: Ali Allawi, Richard J. Evans, Scott Anderson, Malu Halasa - 24th March 2014 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 42:00

Anne McElvoy explores the roads not taken with the historian Richard Evans. Counterfactual history began as an Enlightenment parlour game and has become a serious academic pursuit, but Evans argues against endless speculation as to what might have been. The final meeting between Lawrence of Arabia and Faisal I of Iraq was an anti-climax which belied their history. The biographers of these two leaders, Scott Anderson and the former Iraqi politician Ali Allawi, place these men at the centre of the making of the modern Middle East. The writer Malu Halasa offers an alternative view of the violent events in Syria as she curates a book of political posters, comic strips, blogs and plays.

 STW: Daniel Kahneman, Henry Marsh, Michael Ignatieff and Lisa Appignanesi - 17th March 2014 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 41:41

Tom Sutcliffe discusses how we make decisions with the Nobel prize-winning psychologist Daniel Kahneman. Moral choices in politics can be a complicated business, according to the academic and former politician Michael Ignatieff, who explores whether the age of international intervention is over. Doctors work under the oath 'do no harm', but the neurosurgeon Henry Marsh says the decision whether to operate on a brain is rarely that simple. High emotion can cloud your judgement and the writer Lisa Appignanesi looks back at sensational crimes of passion to ask how far the perpetrators were responsible for their actions.

 STW: Andrew Hussey, Gabrielle Rifkind & Ziauddin Sardar 10th March 2014 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 41:54

Tom Sutcliffe talks to Andrew Hussey about the often fraught relationship between France and its Arab ex-colonies, and how that plays out in the banlieues of Paris. The psychotherapist Gabrielle Rifkind recounts her experience of conflict resolution in the Middle East. While Rifkind emphases the need to understand what's happened in the past, the writer Ziauddin Sardar tries to imagine what the world would be like if we explored the future in a more systematic and scientific way.

 STW: Michael Wood, Rose George, David Barrie & Yrsa Sigurdardottir 3rd March 2014 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 41:51

Tom Sutcliffe talks to the historian Michael Wood about the spirit and adventure of the Vikings who travelled all over Europe and as far east as Central Asia. The Vikings sailed close to the coast whenever possible, David Barrie celebrates the invention of the sextant three hundred years ago which made open water navigation and exploration possible. The majority of foreign goods we buy are transported by sea and Rose George charts the murky world of today's international shipping. The mystery and danger of the sea is a recurrent theme in the latest crime novel from the Icelandic writer Yrsa Sigurdadottir.

 STW: Adair Turner, Charles Calomiris, Harris Irfan & Maggie Gee 24th February 2014 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 41:59

Tom Sutcliffe discusses money with the American economist Charles Calomiris, who looks back at the history of financial disasters and argues that they're caused more by government failures, than individual bankers. The former head of the Financial Services Authority, Adair Turner, might agree on the need for structural changes, but famously said 'heads should roll' in the banking industry, and has damned much of the banks' trading activities as 'socially useless'. If there has been a moral vacuum at the heart of the banking industry, are there lessons to be learnt from Islamic banking? The financial advisor Harris Irfan believes it's a system that is more equitable and transparent. Seventy five years ago Steinbeck's great depression novel, Grapes of Wrath, was published and Maggie Gee explores its legacy and asks where the wrath is now?

 STW: Vanessa Feltz, Susie Orbach, John Cornwell & Turney Duff, 17th Feb 2014 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 41:32

Andrew Marr discusses the history of confession with the writer John Cornwell, from its origins in the early church to the current day. The psychotherapist Susie Orbach explores whether the confession, both secular and religious, provides psychological relief, and the presenter Vanessa Feltz celebrates its public manifestations, the talk show and radio phone in. The former high-flying Wall Street trader, Turney Duff, is looking for absolution, as he reveals his life of excess.

 STW: Harry Collins, Irving Finkel, Colin Blakemore & Hattie Naylor 10th Feb 2014 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 41:57

Tom Sutcliffe looks at the role of the expert. The curator Irving Finkel decodes the symbols on a 4,000 year old clay tablet and discovers the instructions for the building of an ark. Harry Collins asks why attitudes towards scientific expertise have changed and looks to reassert the special status of science. Colin Blakemore is an expert in neuroscience and vision and he reflects on his part in the documentary, Tim's Vermeer, which explores the relationship between art and science. The playwright Hattie Naylor tells the story of an astronomer going blind who learns to see the wonder of the universe in a different way.

 STW: Luke Harding, David Omand, Alain de Botton & Annette Dittert 3rd Feb 2014 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 42:07

Anne McElvoy talks to the journalist Luke Harding about the inside story on the whistle-blower Edward Snowden. The former director of GCHQ, Sir David Omand, fears the leaks have endangered state security. Claims that America hacked the phone of the German Chancellor Angela Merkel caused uproar in Germany, and the journalist Annette Dittert argues that the memory of the Stasi's spying machine is still raw. There has been little outcry among the British public and the philosopher Alain de Botton explores the nature of news and the 'noise' it generates.

 STW: Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, Trevor Cox, Victoria Williamson & Waldemar Januszczak 27th January 2014 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 41:38

Tom Sutcliffe talks to the composer, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies on the eve of the premier of his tenth symphony. Waldemar Januszczak turns to the 18th century and Rococo for his inspiration. The environment, both built and natural, is key to Trevor Cox's study of sound; whilst the psychologist Victoria Williamson explores our relationship with music.

 STW: Natalie Abrahami, Dick Swaab, Julian Baggini & Helen Dunmore 20th Jan 2014 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 41:55

Tom Sutcliffe discusses the relationship between neuroscience and free will with the neuroscientist Dick Swaab; philosopher Julian Baggini;author Helen Dunmore; and director Natalie Abrahami.

 STW: Linda Colley, David Pilling, David Charter & Maria Delgado 13th Jan 2014 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 42:18

Anne McElvoy talks to the historian Linda Colley about the history of the United Kingdom - what has brought it together, and what is driving it apart. David Pilling offers a contrasting island story, with his study of modern Japan. The correspondent David Charter looks at what 2014 holds for Britain's relationship with the EU. Maria Delgado explores how far culture, especially theatre, has shaped, and been shaped by, identity politics.

 STW: Michael Gove, Simon Schama, Margaret MacMillan & Tom Holland 30th Dec 2013 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 41:57

Andrew Marr discusses the teaching of history with the Government's Education Secretary Michael Gove. He's joined by the historians Margaret MacMillan, Simon Schama and Tom Holland.

 STW: Clive James 23rd Dec 2013 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 41:13

Andrew Marr talks to the writer and former television presenter Clive James.

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