Literary Festival 2015: High Culture and the Western Canon: has the fightback begun?
Speaker(s):
Professor Sarah Churchwell, Jonty Claypole,
Maya Jaggi,
Frederic Raphael
Chair: Professor
Maurice Fraser
Recorded on
27 February 2015.
With the
BBC having announced a remake of
Kenneth Clark's
TV series Civilisation, and
Melvyn Bragg’s intellectual cornucopia on
Radio 4,
In Our Time, now in its 17th year, we will be asking whether the mission of
Lord Reith 'to educate, inform and entertain' is alive and well. Can
Matthew Arnold,
TS Eliot and FR Leavis sleep well in their graves? Has the era of dumbing down to ' widen access ' run its course? Why shouldn't ALL schoolchildren be asked to grapple with the 'difficult' texts, rich canvases or musical scores of our western inheritance? Why shouldn't everyone have the chance to join the 'elite'?
Sarah Churchwell is Professor of
American Literature and
Public Understanding of the
Humanities at
UEA. She is the author of
Careless People:
Murder,
Mayhem and The
Invention of
The Great Gatsby,
The Many Lives of
Marilyn Monroe, and her literary journalism has appeared in the
Guardian,
New Statesman,
TLS,
New York Times Book Review, and the
Spectator, among others. She comments regularly on arts, culture, and politics for UK television and radio, has judged many literary prizes, including the
Bailey’s (
Orange) Prize for Fiction and the
2014 Man Booker Prize for
Fiction, and she is the 2015
Eccles Centre Writer in Residence at the
British Library.
Jonty Claypole is
Director of Arts at the BBC. He works across television, radio and online, ensuring the BBC succeeds in its mission of "Arts for
Everyone". As a director then executive producer, he has made over
100 television documentaries for
BBC Television, including landmark series like
Seven Ages of Britain,
A History of
Art in
Three Colours, A Very
British Renaissance and
Andrew Marr's
Great Scotts. He has created strands like What Do Artists Do
All Day,
Secret Knowledge and
In Their Own Words. He also runs BBC Television's in-house arts department with production teams right across the country.
Maya Jaggi is a cultural journalist and critic who has reported from five continents, and was contracted as one of Guardian
Review’s leading profile writers for a decade.She has also written for the FT,
Independent,
Sunday Times Culture,
Daily Telegraph,
Economist and Newsweek; and was writer-presenter of the
BBC4 TV documentary Isabel Allende:
The Art of
Reinvention. Her conversations with cultural theorist
Stuart Hall were made into a four-hour film by
Mike Dibb. She has judged literary awards including the
Dublin Impac and
Orange, and chaired the jury of the Man
Asian in
Hong Kong. Educated at
Oxford and
LSE, she was described as “one of
Britain’s most respected arts journalists” by the
Open University, which awarded her an honorary doctorate in
2012.
Frederic Raphael, a major scholar in classics at
St John's College, Cambridge, has written over twenty-five novels and volumes of short stories, as well as essays, biographies, translations and many reviews. His most recent book on the ancient world is A Jew Among the
Romans about
Flavius Josephus. His second volume of autobiography,
Going Up, will be published next year. So will his novel
Private Views. Among his many film and television scripts are
Darling,
Two for the Road, the
Glittering Prizes and
Stanley Kubrick's
Eyes Wide Shut. His most recent script,
This Man This Woman is due to be shot next year.
The LSE European Institute (@LSEEI) was established in
1991 as a dedicated centre for the interdisciplinary study of processes of integration and fragmentation within
Europe. In the most recent national
Research Assessment Exercise, the
Institute was ranked first for research in
European Studies in the
United Kingdom. The LSE European Institute has been a
Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence since 2009.
This event forms part of the LSE
Space for Thought Literary
Festival 2015, taking place from Monday 23 - Saturday
28 February 2015, with the theme '
Foundations'.