Authenticity
Aleks Krotoski asks what it means to be authentic in a digital world full of filters.
Technology has always allowed us to push the boundaries of what's real and not real. From filters on our holiday snaps to recreating life in a laboratory.
Is it any wonder then that amidst all this 21st century noise we're searching for an authentic voice?
But what authenticity actually is can be difficult to define, particularly in the digital sphere where filters, artifice and simulation are part of the fabric of how we engage on social media.
From Aristotle to Frankenstein, to politicians tweeting from the bathroom, Aleks Krotoski goes in search of the authentic, taking a look at the drivers behind our preoccupation with allowing others to see 'the real self'.
Contributors include: science writer Philip Ball, Stephen Lussier of DeBeers, sociologist Ruth Penfold-Mounce, author Professor Andrew Potter, Dr Suzy Jagger and Instagrammer Stina Sanders.
Producer: Caitlin Smith.
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Clip
-
Speak:Unique - synthetic speech, authentic voice.
Duration: 01:36
Music Played
-
Ratatat
Wildcat
-
DJ Pitch Black
It's All Real
-
Pfeifferhorn
Philip Ball
is a science writer and presenter of Radio 4’s Science stories.  His writings on science for the popular press have covered topical issues ranging from cosmology to the future of molecular biology.
He talks about the age old cultural insecurities about the authenticity of nature, verses man-made, scientific discoveries - and how it reflects on our idea of self.
Dr. Suzy Jagger
is an Emeritus Fellow of the University of Roehampton. Suzy’s research has focused on professional ethics, which involved the creation and development of a 3D virtual online game - Virtual Values.
She was diagnosed with the Bulbar Onset form of ALS (Motor Neurone Disease) in October of 2016, meaning she will eventually lose the ability to speak. As a singer/songwriter and more recently a university lecturer, her voice was an integral part of her identity and career.
She talks to us about banking her own authentic voice, and how using technology in this way means for her, family and friends.Â
Stephen Lussier
, one of the largest diamond traders in the world.
He showed us some of the most beautiful diamonds they have and explains why people have placed such value in diamonds for millennia, and why authentic gemstones still hold the most value today.
Dr. Ruth Penfold-Mounce
is a sociologist at the University of York with an interest in the digital world, celebrity and visual culture.
She tells us why authenticity is such a valuable commodity, one that celebrities, advisors and politicians all want to get a piece of - despite the danger of overstepping the boundaries of social media.
Andrew Potter
is a Montreal-based academic and journalist, and is the author of the book ‘The Authenticity Hoax: How we get lost finding ourselves.’
He talks to us about challenges we face when we have to feel one way yet perform in another within society, and how the value of the authentic may be more about status competition than personal truth.
Stina Sanders
Euan MacDonald
Euan MacDonald was diagnosed with Motor Neurone Disease (MND) in 2003. Together he and his father Donald established the Euan MacDonald Centre for MND research at the University of Edinburgh and later set up
This is a research project that aims to develop personalised synthetic voices to help people with MND to sound like themselves when speaking becomes a challenge.
Speak: Unique is currently running a small pilot study in the central belt of Scotland involving the use of voice donors. The patient’s voice is merged with that of the donor, who has been selected because they are the same age, sex and region, which means it feels more authentic to the patient. ÂBroadcasts
- Mon 17 Apr 2017 16:30´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 4
- Wed 9 Aug 2017 23:30´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 4
Podcast
-
The Digital Human
Aleks Krotoski explores the digital world