Upstream Colour; The Story of the Jews on 大象传媒 2; new Margaret Atwood book Maddaddam
Simon Schama explores The Story of the Jews; can anyone explain the plot of new film Upstream Colour?; new book Maddaddam by Margaret Atwood; reviewers' choices at Tate Britain.
Simon Schama explores The Story of the Jews, in a big new history strand on 大象传媒 2. Does his personal approach work for this massive subject?
Margaret Atwood's latest novel, Maddaddam, follows a group of survivors after a man-made plague has swept the earth.
In Blue Stockings, Jessica Swale's new play, the year is 1896 and Tess Moffat and her fellow first years are determined to win the right to graduate from Girton College, Cambridge, the first college to admit women.
Upstream Colour, Shane Carruth's new film, is a haunting, enigmatic tale of destiny, free will and mind-controlling bugs.
And Saturday Review asks its guests - this week it's Kathryn Hughes, John Mullen and Dominic Sandbrook - to select just one picture from Tate Britain's permanent collection for a kind of fine art equivalent of A Good Read.
Produced by Anne-Marie Cole.
Last on
More episodes
Previous
The Story of the Jews
MaddAddam
The third and final part of Margaret Atwood's Oryx and Crake series of science fiction novels, MaddAddam, is available now, published by Bloomsbury.
Blue Stockings
Jessica Swale's debut play is on at Shakespeare's Globe theatre in London until 11th October.
听
Episode image: Tala Gouveia, Ellie Piercy and Olivia Ross in Blue Stockings. Photo by Manuel Harlan.
Upstream Colour
Tate Britain
We have asked our guests this week to select听their favourite item from permanent collection.
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Interviewed Guest | Kathryn Hughes |
Interviewed Guest | John Mullen |
Interviewed Guest | Dominic Sandbrook |
Producer | Anne-Marie Cole |
Broadcast
- Sat 31 Aug 2013 19:15大象传媒 Radio 4
Subscribe to the Saturday Review podcast
Sign up to the Saturday Review podcast for the latest and past episodes to download.
Podcast
-
Saturday Review
Sharp, critical discussion of the week's cultural events, with Tom Sutcliffe and guests