| December 31, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
Hygiene
If our rules about cleanliness dont match our practices,
why are we so interested in hygiene?
Guests:
Timothy Burke Historian at Swarthmore College
Nayan Shah Historian at the University of California,
San Diego
originally aired September 29, 2003
|
| December 30, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
Juries
In the 90s it was the Rodney King verdict. Now its
huge damage awards. In both criminal and civil trials,
controversial verdicts have American juries under fire.
Is it time to rethink our Jury System?
Guests:
Albert Alschuler University of Chicago Law School
Stephan Landsman Depaul University College of Law
originally aired July 30, 2003
|
| December 29, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
History of Racism
Race is sometimes understood as a biological category
and sometimes as a social construction. Where do we get
our conceptions of race?
Guests:
Julie Ward Philosopher at Loyola University
Charles Mills Philosopher at the University of
Illinois at Chicago
originally aired September 17, 2003
|
| December 26, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
Nostalgia and Hollywood
The death of Katherine Hepburn prompted many critics to
revisit her career, and the era of Classic Hollywood.
Hepburn was remembered for her independent spirit and
her feminism. But is this the way Hepburn appeared at
the time? Or just the way we see her now? How is our picture
of classic Hollywood shaped by nostalgia?
Guests:
Tom Gunning Member of the Committee on Cinema and
Media Studies at the University of Chicago
Mary Desjardins Film and Television Studies at
Dartmouth College
originally aired July 11, 2003
|
| December 25, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
Modern Time
From standardized calendars to coordinated time zones,
why do we organize time?
Guests:
Peter Galison Historian of Science and Physicist
at Harvard University
Mary Ann Doane Department of Modern Culture and
Media at Brown University
originally aired September 25, 2003
|
| December 24, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
Morality and the Marketplace
Economist Adam Smith like many early economic theorists
was a moral philosopher. How did Smiths ideas
about morality influence his ideas about the market? And
what do they reveal about contemporary capitalism?
Guests:
Stephen Darwall University of Michigan
Sam Fleischacker University of Illinois at Chicago
originally aired September 8, 2003
|
| December 23, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
The Courts and the War on Terror
Several months ago, federal appeals courts ruled on two
cases that could dramatically alter how the Justice Department
prosecutes suspected terrorists. Host Gretchen Helfrich
and guests discuss the courts and the war on terror.
Guests:
Ronald Allen Legal scholar at the Northwestern
University and author Constitutional Criminal Procedure
Richard Pildes Legal scholar at the New York University
School of Law and co-author of The Law of Democracy:
Legal Structure of the Political Process
|
| December 22, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
The History of Juvenile Justice
The first juvenile court was established just over one
hundred years ago yet debate continues over how to deal
with children who commit crimes. Host Gretchen Helfrich
and guests discuss the history of Juvenile Justice.
Guests:
Victoria Getis On faculty at the Ohio State University
and author of The Juvenile Court and the Progressives
David Tanenhaus Historian at the University of
Nevada and author of the forthcoming book Juvenile
Justice in the Making
|
| December 19, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
Acquiring New Rights
Do you know your rights? The overturning of the Massachusetts
ban on gay marriage may transform who has the right to
marry. When did marriage become a right? Public opinion,
politics and the law all contribute to how rights are
defined and established. What does it take to get new
rights?
Guests:
Andrew Koppelman Legal scholar at the Northwestern
University School of Law and author of the book The
Gay Rights Question in Contemporary American Law
Cass Sunstein Sunstein is a legal scholar at the
University of Chicago Law School and author of the book
Why Societies Need Law
|
| December 18, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
Politics of Popular Culture
Politics and popular culture often go hand-in-hand. What
is it that makes popular culture political?
Guests:
Esther Leslie Teaches in the school of English
and humanities
at the University of London and author of Hollywood
Flatlands: Animation, Critical Theory and the Avant-Garde
Jane Shattuc Teaches in the department of Visual
and Media Arts at Emerson College in Boston, author of
The Talking Cure:
TV Talk Shows and Women, and co-editor of Hop on
Pop: The Politics and Pleasures of Popular Culture
|
| December 17, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
Imagining China
China is seen by the West as both an essential trade partner
and a potential threat. For much of its history, the United
States has entertained hopes that China would embrace
Western style democracy but those expectations have been
repeatedly dashed. How do these past conceptions shape
our ideas of China today?
Guests:
Richard Madsen Sociologist at the University of
California and author of China and the American Dream:
A Moral Inquiry
Kenneth Pomeranz Historian at University of California
and author of the book The Great Divergence: China,
Europe and the Making of the Modern World Economy
|
| December 16, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
Public Sentimentality
President Bush shed tears during his Thanksgiving visit
to Iraq. Was it a calculated photo-op, or a genuine expression
of emotion? Host Gretchen Helfrich and guests discuss
public sentimentality.
Guests:
Julie Ellison Teaches in the Department of English
and American culture at the University of Michigan and
author of Cato's Tears and the Making of Anglo-American
Emotion
Julia Stern Teaches in the department of English
and American studies at Northwestern University and author
of The Plight of Feeling: Sympathy and Dissent in the
Early American Novel
|
| December 15, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
The Democratic Party and the Left
Howard Dean has received the endorsement of Democratic
party standard-bearer, Al Gore. After a decade of centrism,
is the Democratic party shifting to the left? Host Gretchen
Helfrich and guests discuss the Democrats and the left.
Guests:
John Aldrich. Aldrich Political scientist at Duke
University and author of Change and Continuity in the
2000 Elections
David Menefee Libey Political scientist at Pomona
College in Claremont, California and author of The
Triumph of Campaign-Centered Politics
|
| December 12, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
Schools in Film
Schools provide the setting for a wide variety of films.
There are cult classics like Fast Times at Ridgemont
High and the films keep coming. Recent releases
include School of Rock and Elephant. What
kind of place is school in the movies?
Guests:
Jonathan Miller Teaches film studies at the Illinois
Institute of Technology and is a film critic for Chicago
Public Radio
Ellen Seiter Media scholar at the University of
Southern California and author of the books, Television
and New Media Audiences, and Sold Separately: Children
and Parents in Consumer Culture
|
| December 11, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
Beyond Kyoto
If Russia joins the United States in rejecting the Kyoto
protocol on global warming, will the treaty be doomed?
Guests:
John Reilly Associate director for research at
the joint program on the science and policy of global
change
Robert Stavins Chairman of the environment and
natural resources faculty group at Harvard University
and author of Environmental Economics and Public Policy:
Selected Papers of Robert N. Stavins, 1988-1999
|
| December 10, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
The Power of the Muse
The muse is at once an artistic ideal and a model of feminine
power. Ideas of the muse have varied from passive figures
who serve to inspire male artists to women who are active
participants in artistic and public life. How has the
figure of the muse shaped the place of women in the arts?
Guests:
Gayle Levy Teaches in the French department and
the Women's and Gender studies departments at the University
of Missouri and author of Refiguring the Muse
Elizabeth Eger Teaches in the department of English
language and literature at King's College and co-curating
an exhibition at the National Gallery in London in London,
England. She is also the author of the forthcoming book,
Living Muses: Women of Reason from Enlightenment to
Romanticism.
|
| December 9, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
Prison Economics
Rural communities vie for the jobs that prisons bring
while a number of states are turning to private contractors
to manage prisons. What are the economic interests that
drive America's corrections industry?
Guests:
Tracy Huling Co-director of the National Resource
Center on Prisons and Communities and director of the
documentary Yes, In My Backyard, which examines
the prison industry in rural New York
Paul Leighton Sociologist at Eastern Michigan University
and co-editor of the book Criminal Justice Ethics
|
| December 8, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
Anti-Semitism in Europe
European leaders are once again contending with a wave
of anti-Semitism. What is the contemporary social and
political context of anti-Semitism in Europe?
Guests:
Anson Rabinbach Historian at Princeton University
and author of In the Shadow of Catastrophe: German
Intellectuals Between Apocalypse and Enlightenment
David Meyers Historian at the University of California
and author of Resisting History: Historicism and its
Discontents in German-Jewish Thought
|
| December 5, 2003 |
| audio not yet available |
The Bawdy Tradition of Burlesque
For much of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, burlesque
entertainment served as a raunchy escape from American
prudery. Today, burlesque is making a comeback. Why the
modern interest in this old time entertainment?
Guests:
Eric Schaefer Media scholar at Emerson College
and author of Daring! Shocking! True!: A History of
Exploitation Films
Rachel Shteir Theater scholar at Depaul University
in Chicago and author of the forthcoming book Grit,
Glamour and the Grind:
A History of the Striptease
|
| December 4, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
The History of the Imagination
Imagination is considered critical to any work of art
or literature. But what the imagination consists of, how
it actually works, and what it produces are questions
that have long intrigued philosophers, writers, and scientists.
How have we imagined the imagination?
Guests:
Claudia Swan Art historian at Northwestern University
and author of the forthcoming book, Mimesis and Imagination
in Seventeenth Century Dutch Art
Forest Pyle Teaches at University of Oregon and
author of The Ideology of Imagination: Subject and
Society in the discourse of Romanticism
|
| December 3, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
The Power and Politics of Nuclear Weapons
The Cold War arms race may be over, but the nuclear capabilities
of North Korea and Iran prove that nuclear weapons continue
to shape global politics.
Guests:
Scott Sagan Co-director of the Center for International
Security and Cooperation at Stanford University. He has
written extensively on nuclear weapons issues.
James Goodby Senior advisor for the security studies
program at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, former
US foreign service officer, and co-author of the book
The Gravest Danger: Nuclear Weapons
|
| December 2, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
The History of Artificial Intelligence
It's long been a goal of science to create artificial
forms of intelligence. What has the quest for A-I revealed
about the human mind?
Guests:
Justine Cassell Teaches in the program in media,
technology and society at Northwestern University. She
developed the Embodied Conversational Agent (ECA), a virtual
human capable of interacting with humans using both language
and nonverbal behavior.
Jessica Riskin Historian of science at Stanford
University and author of Science in the Age of Sensibility:
The Sentimental Empiricists of the French Enlightenment
and the forthcoming book The Android's I:A Joint
History of Consciousness and Artificial Life
|
| December 1, 2003 |
| Listen
to the Entire Program |
Anti-Americanism in Europe
Is European hostility toward the United States aimed solely
at the Bush administration, or does it fit into a longer
tradition of anti-Americanism?
Guests:
Richard Pells Historian at the University of Texas
and author of Not Like Us: How Europeans Have Love,
Hated and Transformed American Culture Since World War
II
Jean-Philippe Mathy French studies scholar at the
University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana and author
of the book French Resistance: The French-American
Culture Wars
|