19 episodes

How can we keep our institutions alive and healthy in times of cultural change? In conversation with a range of leaders, academics, writers and artists I’m going to consider how we might renew our cultural life through ideas and imagination.

Beaconsfield Jack Jacobs

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.7 • 13 Ratings

How can we keep our institutions alive and healthy in times of cultural change? In conversation with a range of leaders, academics, writers and artists I’m going to consider how we might renew our cultural life through ideas and imagination.

    #18 The Call to Repair with Dr Iain McGilchrist

    #18 The Call to Repair with Dr Iain McGilchrist

    In this podcast, Dr Iain McGilchrist and I speak about themes from his book The Matter with Things. We discuss the collapse of Western civilisation’s spiritual life, the hemisphere hypothesis as Dr McGilchrist presents it in his neuroscientific research and his philosophical investigations, his sense of the Sacred, the unknown of the All, and how we might find a space for silence, metaphor, and love in our modern lives.

    • 53 min
    #17 The Impossible Indian: Gandhi and the Temptation of Violence with Professor Faisal Devji

    #17 The Impossible Indian: Gandhi and the Temptation of Violence with Professor Faisal Devji

    In this podcast, I speak with Professor Faisal Devji from St Antony’s College, Oxford, about Mahatma Gandhi’s complex relationship with violence, revolution, and reform.

    • 47 min
    #16 The Untold Stories of Leonard Cohen with Michael Posner

    #16 The Untold Stories of Leonard Cohen with Michael Posner

    Taking a (well-earned!) pause on politics and reform, in this episode of Beaconsfield podcast I speak with Michael Posner, author of a three-part oral history of Leonard Cohen: the songwriter and poet who has meant more to me in my life than perhaps any other. We discuss Leonard’s character from the perspective of those who knew him best, his relationships with those he loved and lost, his various hidden selves, and his original sense of God, defeat, brokenness, and reconciliation. At the heart of Leonard's work is a reach for the light through the cracks of humanity - I hope you find this conversation as meaningful as I did.

    • 48 min
    #15 Re-discovering the ”Empirical” Burke: Commerce and Manners with Gregory Collins

    #15 Re-discovering the ”Empirical” Burke: Commerce and Manners with Gregory Collins

    It was a joy to speak with Yale's Gregory Collins about his book, Commerce and Manners in Edmund Burke’s Political Economy. The Burke that emerges is one not immediately familiar to us: a principled reformer with powers of imaginative eloquence, yes; yet one with an equally deep appreciation of empirical data and its ability to inform sound political decision making.

    • 1 hr 6 min
    #14 The Gun, The Ship and The Pen: On Written Constitutions with Professor Linda Colley

    #14 The Gun, The Ship and The Pen: On Written Constitutions with Professor Linda Colley

    Linda Colley is one of the world's most eminent scholars of global and imperial history. Professor of History at Princeton, she is a highly respected contributor to public debates around constitutionalism in the United Kingdom, and the recent author of The Gun, The Ship and The Pen: Warfare, Constitutions and the Making of the Modern World. In this conversation, we reflect on written constitutions as they globally evolved through crisis and revolution in the 17th, 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries. In the process, we examine the strange ways in which written constitutions have come to both entrench and redress existing inequalities for women and Indigenous peoples, as well as the threats to written constitutions around the world today, and what might be done to preserve these fallible, yet still essential, paper creations of human beings.

    • 49 min
    #13 Our Human Tradition: On Consolation with Professor Michael Ignatieff

    #13 Our Human Tradition: On Consolation with Professor Michael Ignatieff

    What do failure, loss, and tragedy have to teach us about being human? How might we live in hope and truth despite our wounds? Why must we venture beyond ourselves to console others? In this podcast, it is an honour to speak with Professor Michael Ignatieff about the human tradition of consolation. We explore what religious traditions, the lives of past thinkers and statesmen, and Michael's own experience in active politics have to teach us about the need for consolation: to live, in an imperfect world, in solidarity with each other.

    • 52 min

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5
13 Ratings

13 Ratings

Adam Goodman ,

Excellent

Thought provoking and refreshing dialogue in the midst of our evolving cultural landscape

Adam Miller2 ,

Insightful

Brilliant, insightful conversations about leadership and reform.

richtiger ,

A great start

An intelligent and accessible first interview. Well done Jack

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