Visualising War and Peace
Een podcast door The University of St Andrews - Woensdagen
86 Afleveringen
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World of Warcraft with Taliesin and Evitel
Gepubliceerd: 4-2-2022 -
Visualisations of War in Online Gaming with Iain Donald
Gepubliceerd: 2-2-2022 -
Peacebuilding and Transitional Justice with Roddy Brett
Gepubliceerd: 26-1-2022 -
The Just War Tradition with Anthony Lang Jr and Rory Cox
Gepubliceerd: 19-1-2022 -
Painting Invisible Threats with Kathryn Brimblecombe-Fox
Gepubliceerd: 12-1-2022 -
The Art of Peace with Teresa Ó Brádaigh Bean, Lydia Cole and Azadeh Sobout
Gepubliceerd: 22-12-2021 -
Conflict Textiles with Roberta Bacic
Gepubliceerd: 15-12-2021 -
War Reportage and Stories of Migration with artist George Butler
Gepubliceerd: 8-12-2021 -
‘Sorry for the War’: photographer Peter van Agtmael's take on the US at war
Gepubliceerd: 1-12-2021 -
War and Peace Reporting in Afghanistan
Gepubliceerd: 24-11-2021 -
The Poetics of Rome’s Punic Wars
Gepubliceerd: 17-11-2021 -
Ancient Greek warfare and its influence on modern habits of visualising war
Gepubliceerd: 10-11-2021 -
Visualising Future Conflict through Storytelling with Matthew Brown, Emily Spiers and Will Slocombe
Gepubliceerd: 3-11-2021 -
How War Disrupts the Experience of Time with Julian Wright
Gepubliceerd: 27-10-2021 -
Re-presenting well-known conflicts at the Imperial War Museums: World War II and the Holocaust
Gepubliceerd: 20-10-2021 -
Strategy-making and/as Storytelling with Phillips O’Brien
Gepubliceerd: 13-10-2021 -
Re-presenting well-known conflicts at the Imperial War Museums: World War I
Gepubliceerd: 6-10-2021 -
Gallipoli to the Somme: musical responses to WW1 with Kate Kennedy and Anthony Ritchie
Gepubliceerd: 29-9-2021 -
War, knowledge and narrative from Napoleon to today
Gepubliceerd: 22-9-2021 -
Documenting war and promoting peace in Mosul with Omar Mohammed / Mosul Eye
Gepubliceerd: 15-9-2021
How do war stories work? And what do they do to us? Join University of St Andrews historian Alice König and colleagues as they explore how war and peace get presented in art, text, film and music. With the help of expert guests, they unpick conflict stories from all sorts of different periods and places. And they ask how the tales we tell and the pictures we paint of peace and war influence us as individuals and shape the societies we live in.
