
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Tom Sutcliffe talks to Anne Dudley about the new opera, The Doctor's Tale, which with a Monty Python-esque absurdity tells the story of a devoted doctor, who just happens to be a dog. The writer Elif Batuman follows the footsteps of her Russian literary heroes, to see whether their lives and work can influence her own. While the BBC's former Moscow correspondent, Martin Sixsmith takes in a thousand years of Russian history. And David Runciman asks 'Can Democracy Cope?' with what is happening around the world, and looks back to the works of Tocqueville and Nietzsche to help make sense of the state of democracy today.
4.7
152152 ratings
Tom Sutcliffe talks to Anne Dudley about the new opera, The Doctor's Tale, which with a Monty Python-esque absurdity tells the story of a devoted doctor, who just happens to be a dog. The writer Elif Batuman follows the footsteps of her Russian literary heroes, to see whether their lives and work can influence her own. While the BBC's former Moscow correspondent, Martin Sixsmith takes in a thousand years of Russian history. And David Runciman asks 'Can Democracy Cope?' with what is happening around the world, and looks back to the works of Tocqueville and Nietzsche to help make sense of the state of democracy today.
5,389 Listeners
381 Listeners
1,839 Listeners
125 Listeners
7,886 Listeners
295 Listeners
308 Listeners
501 Listeners
1,791 Listeners
1,052 Listeners
898 Listeners
272 Listeners
153 Listeners
365 Listeners
962 Listeners
1,921 Listeners
1,078 Listeners
65 Listeners
292 Listeners
74 Listeners
736 Listeners
2,962 Listeners
99 Listeners
316 Listeners