London Review Bookshop Podcast
Arts:Books
The fleeting appearance of black faces in Tudor paintings marks the silent presence of a community's untold story. Who were the black men and women who lived, loved, and died in Renaissance Britain? How did they arrive? And how can we recover their voices when all we have is a glimpse in a portrait here, or church and court record there? At this event the writer Fred D'Aguiar and historians David Olusoga and Catherine Fletcher joined Nandini Das, director of TIDE, to explore the challenge of using fiction to recover those lost voices in history.
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D.M. Black, Robert Chandler and Giovanna di Ceglie on Dante
John Clegg and Jess McKinney: Pinecoast/Weeding
Tariq Ali & James Meek: The Forty-Year War in Afghanistan
Stephanie Sy-Quia and Will Harris: Amnion
Hazel Press Autumn 2021 Celebration
Iain Sinclair & Gareth Evans: The Gold Machine
Karl Ove Knausgaard on 'The Morning Star'
Chloe Aridjis & Lynne Tillman: Dialogue with a Somnambulist
Massimo Montanari and Rachel Roddy: A Short History of Spaghetti with Tomato Sauce
Paul Gilroy and Adam Shatz on William Gardner Smith’s The Stone Face
Revivalism: Penelope Fitzgerald, with Susannah Clapp and Hermione Lee
Leo Boix and Andrew McMillan
Maggie Nelson & Amelia Abraham: On Freedom
Lauren Elkin & Deborah Levy: No. 91/92 Notes on a Parisian Commute
Carole Angier and Caroline Moorehead: Speak, Silence
Morgan Parker and Rachel Long: Other People's Comfort Keeps Me Up at Night
Claire-Louise Bennett and Sheila Heti: Checkout 19
Owen Hatherley & Juliet Jacques: Clean Living Under Difficult Circumstances
Amia Srinivasan and Alice Spawls: The Right to Sex
Lavinia Greenlaw and Joanna Pocock: Some Answers Without Questions
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