426 Matsuo Bashō - Haiku's Greatest Master

426 Matsuo Bashō - Haiku's Greatest Master

Up next

812 Talking Classics (with Mary Beard) | My Last Book with Karen Spence

Why are we so fascinated by the ancient world? What can we find in the distant past that is recognizably human--and how do we grapple with the complicated and controversial issues that the past forces us to address? In this episode, Jacke talks to distinguished classicist Mary Be ...  Show more

811 The Harlem Renaissance [Reclaimed] | My Last Book with Erin Sharkey

The Harlem Renaissance, the great flowering of African American arts and culture in the early twentieth century, is hard to define but easy to admire. Coupled with the Great Migration, in which hundreds of thousands of Southern black workers moved to the rapidly industrializing c ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Elisa Gabbert on Sylvia Plath ("Lady Lazarus")
Close Readings

What a searching, stimulating conversation this was. Elisa Gabbert joins the podcast to talk about a poem she and I have both long loved, Sylvia Plath's "Lady Lazarus."Elisa is a poet, critic, and essayist—and the author of several books. Her recent titles include Normal Distance ...  Show more

BonusEp. 17 - The Hub & Spoke Radio Hour
The Lonely Palette

The Lonely Palette, as you've heard so often, is an enormously proud founding member of the Hub & Spoke Audio Collective, a group of fiercely independent, story-driven, mind-expanding podcasts. Since 2017, we've supported each other while forging our own paths, prioritizing craft ...  Show more

La danza del cóndor y el águila: Etnografías y narrativas del 'despertar muisca'
New Books Network en español

En la vida, muchas veces adoptamos filosofías, expresiones e incluso comportamientos que no obedecen a nuestros contextos inmediatos; tal vez por mayor empatía con unas u otras, lo cual nos lleva a construir nuestras propias identidades. Otras veces nos quedamos con nuestros pasa ...  Show more

The Returns: Hush Rush
The Last Archive

Each week on ‘The Returns,’ we pull a different episode from our archive to help put our present politics into historical context. In the 1980s, Rush Limbaugh transformed talk radio. In the process, he radicalized his listeners and the conservative movement. Limbaugh’s talk radio ...  Show more