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Paul Farley visits the Somme, a river whose sleepy character belies its violent history. Read more
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Somme
Paul Farley visits the Somme, a river whose sleepy character belies its violent history.
Albrecht Durer: Printing Press Native
Charlotte Higgins charts the printing prowess of German Renaissance artist Albrecht Durer.
Shanghai - World City Redux
Rana Mitter on how today's ultra-modern Shanghai is rediscovering its glamorous past.
Living with Memory in Rwanda
Zoe Norridge reports from Rwanda on how the country's devastating genocide is ed.
Eileen Gray: The Missing Heart of Design
Fiona Shaw explores the life and work of Irish-born designer and architect Eileen Gray.
Billy - The Other Lloyd Webber
Andrew Green explores the life and little-heard romantic music of William Lloyd Webber.
Merchant Ivory - Classics, Celluloid and Class
Laurence Scott re-assesses the work of the film-making team known as Merchant Ivory.
Educating Isaac
Nicholas Baragwanath explores a forgotten mode of music education once used in Naples.
Dylan Thomas the Radio Poet
Writer Rachel Trezise tells the story of Dylan Thomas's broadcasting life.
Per Petterson
A profile of Norwegian writer Per Petterson, author of the novel Out Stealing Horses.
Clocks and Clouds: An Adventure Around György Ligeti
A portrait of a magnificent and mischievous musical spirit, György Ligeti.
Sonic Art Boom - The Art of Noise
Composer Dan Jones celebrates sound art and The Art of Noise Manifesto.
Dennis Potter - With Aggressive Affection
Matthew Sweet reassseses the life, work and legacy of playwright Dennis Potter.
Bannockburn Begins
Novelist Louise Welsh explores meanings, ancient and modern, of the battle of Bannockburn.
Music in the Great War: Gavrilo Princip's Footprint
Maria Margaronis explores the legacy of Gavrilo Princip, whose shots sparked WWI.
World War One: Cradle of Jazz
Alyn Shipton charts the musical and social changes behind the emergence of jazz.
How Did Scotland's Artists Turn Nationalist?
Stuart Kelly examines why many Scottish artists today have declared for independence.
Faith Without God
Episode 1
Michael Goldfarb learns about the real lives of Buddha, Confucius, Thales and Pythagoras.
Episode 2
Michael Goldfarb explains how Buddhism and Confucianism became religions.
I Have Been Here Before
How a 1927 essay by a former soldier influenced JB Priestley and other writers for decades
Who Was Richard Strauss?
Tom Service travels to Switzerland in search of the real Richard Strauss.
Enter the Dragon: Chinese Theatre in the 21st Century
Rana Mitter travels to Beijing to explore the recent flourishing of theatre in China.
The Gospel According to Joan
A portrait of the life and legacy of theatre director Joan Littlewood.
God and the Great War
Frank Cottrell Boyce explores the impact of WWI on religion at home and at the front.
New Generation Thinkers
Fern Riddell discusses suffragette Kitty Marion. Plus Gregory Tate on science and poetry.
Christopher Harding, John Gallagher
Radio 3 New Generation Thinkers on Freud in Asia and the foreign language phrase book.
In the Shadow of the Tower (Exhibition Exposed)
Andrew Hussey visits Paris to understand how the Eiffel Tower has shaped French culture.
A Cultural History of the Plague
Laura Ashe explores how the plague has changed our social and cultural landscape.
The Fundamentalist Queen
Samira Ahmed delves into the mysterious life of Oliver Cromwell's wife, Elizabeth.
Music and the Jews
I've Heard There Was a Secret Chord
Norman Lebrecht explores the role music has played at some key points in Jewish history.
There's a Place for Us
Norman Lebrecht traces the history of female Jewish singers.