This week, Thea Lenarduzzi and Lucy Dallas are joined by Patricia J. Williams to discuss ‘Giving a Damn: Racism, romance and Gone with the Wind’, Williams’s deeply researched, and deeply felt, essay on the roots and legacy of racial injustice in the United States; Douglas Field considers a novel about a 'human mole' by Richard Wright, the African American writer best known for 'Native Son', which now sees the light of day, eighty years after it was written; plus Sylvia Plath’s domestic embellishments and the greatest novels of the twenty-first century to date (cont.)
Giving a Damn: Racism, romance and 'Gone with the Wind' by Patricia J. Williams, published next week by TLS Books
The Man Who Lived Underground by Richard Wright
A special subscription offer for TLS podcast listeners: www.the-tls.co.uk/buy/pod
See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Weighty matters
Celestial Bodies – winner of the 2019 Man Booker International prize for fiction
Victoria at 200
Knowing laughter
Journey to the centre of the earth
To infinities – and beyond
The life-writing issue
Ian McEwan – an interview
As we like it
Youth injustice system
Whitechapel and Weimar
A deep history of Europe
Forgotten, not gone
Dave Eggers: The violations start with us
O, the Edward Gorey of it all
A nose is a nose is a nose…
Unsilenced voices
Zadie Smith, in conversation
Half glitzy, half dowdy
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: the inaugural Gabriel García Márquez lecture
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Just Dumb Enough Podcast
Voices of Misery Podcast
House of Whimsical Terror
Stuff You Should Know
Timcast IRL