
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


On Start the Week Tom Sutcliffe discusses the writing of war and conflict. The journalist Patrick Cockburn looks back at his years covering crises in the Middle East, especially the rise of the so-called Islamic state. The Turkish writer Ece Temelkuran looks at the difficulty of reporting in a country where press freedoms are severely curtailed and asks whether fiction and poetry are a way of telling a more truthful story. The legendary American investigative reporter Seymour Hersh first gained recognition in the 1960s for exposing the My Lai massacre and its cover-up during the Vietnam War and has spent his career uncovering wrong-doing at the highest level. But reporting is changing and the academic Charlie Beckett celebrates the rise of citizen journalism.
By BBC Radio 44.7
152152 ratings
On Start the Week Tom Sutcliffe discusses the writing of war and conflict. The journalist Patrick Cockburn looks back at his years covering crises in the Middle East, especially the rise of the so-called Islamic state. The Turkish writer Ece Temelkuran looks at the difficulty of reporting in a country where press freedoms are severely curtailed and asks whether fiction and poetry are a way of telling a more truthful story. The legendary American investigative reporter Seymour Hersh first gained recognition in the 1960s for exposing the My Lai massacre and its cover-up during the Vietnam War and has spent his career uncovering wrong-doing at the highest level. But reporting is changing and the academic Charlie Beckett celebrates the rise of citizen journalism.

7,732 Listeners

292 Listeners

368 Listeners

881 Listeners

1,037 Listeners

5,513 Listeners

1,814 Listeners

1,876 Listeners

606 Listeners

290 Listeners

1,830 Listeners

1,075 Listeners

1,965 Listeners

520 Listeners

47 Listeners

302 Listeners

61 Listeners

829 Listeners

130 Listeners

44 Listeners

73 Listeners

4,176 Listeners

3,171 Listeners

113 Listeners