219 episodes

Engelsberg Ideas podcasts bring together leading writers, thinkers and historians to discuss the biggest issues facing the world today. You’ll find calm conversations and thought-provoking analysis.

Engelsberg Ideas Podcasts Engelsberg Ideas Podcasts

    • Government

Engelsberg Ideas podcasts bring together leading writers, thinkers and historians to discuss the biggest issues facing the world today. You’ll find calm conversations and thought-provoking analysis.

    EI Weekly Listen — Lawrence James on the invention of jingoism

    EI Weekly Listen — Lawrence James on the invention of jingoism

    Jingoism was a natural offshoot of late Victorian imperialism. Read by Leighton Pugh.

    Image: Poster for a British imperial railway company. Credit: Pictorial Press Ltd / Alamy Stock Photo 

    • 33 min
    EI Talks... Caravaggio

    EI Talks... Caravaggio

    A small but riveting exhibition at London's National Gallery tells the dramatic story of the troubled Renaissance master's 'last' painting.

    Image: The Martyrdom of St Ursula, 1610. Credit: incamerastock / Alamy Stock Photo

    • 36 min
    EI Weekly Listen — Steven Grosby on the persistence of nationhood

    EI Weekly Listen — Steven Grosby on the persistence of nationhood

    What is a nation, what is its significance, and to what problems of life is its persistence a response? Read by Leighton Pugh.

    Image: Lucas Cranach's The Crossing of the Red Sea, 1530. Credit: Heritage Image Partnership Ltd / Alamy Stock Photo 

    • 22 min
    EI Portraits — Nehemiah Wallington: Puritan chronicler who had far less fun than Pepys

    EI Portraits — Nehemiah Wallington: Puritan chronicler who had far less fun than Pepys

    Vanessa Harding on the God-fearing diarist Nehemiah Wallington whose personality was far removed from the cosmopolitanism of Samuel Pepys, his fast-living contemporary. Read by Sebastian Brown.

    Image: An excerpt from Nehemiah Wallington's diary, dated 1654. Credit: Folger Shakespeare Library. 

    • 13 min
    EI Weekly Listen — Adrian Wooldridge on meritocracy

    EI Weekly Listen — Adrian Wooldridge on meritocracy

    The biggest division in modern society is between the meritocracy and the people, the cognitive elite and the masses, the exam-passers and the exam-flunkers. Read by Leighton Pugh.

    Image: Caricature of a Cambridge University library in the Georgian era. Credit: Thomas Rowlandson / Alamy Stock Photo

    • 29 min
    EI Talks... the Entente Cordiale

    EI Talks... the Entente Cordiale

    Self-interest, imperial competition and new threats in Europe - T.G. Otte examines the complex 120-year long history of the Entente Cordiale with EI's senior editor, Paul Lay.

    Image: First prize winner at the Covent Garden fancy dress ball in 1905, a lady dressed in an elaborate costume as the Entente Cordiale. Credit: Chronicle / Alamy Stock Photo 

    • 36 min

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