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The Ted Hughes Society Podcast
Michael Gowar
23 episodes
1 week ago
This podcast is dedicated to the life and work of Ted Hughes. Its aims are to promote the understanding and appreciation of his writing, especially in schools and universities; to support research and scholarship into his life and work; and to continue to support some of the poublic causes to which he was devoted, especially the preservation and conversation of rivers and the countryside and the encouragement of creative writing for writers of all ages and levels of attainment.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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All content for The Ted Hughes Society Podcast is the property of Michael Gowar and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
This podcast is dedicated to the life and work of Ted Hughes. Its aims are to promote the understanding and appreciation of his writing, especially in schools and universities; to support research and scholarship into his life and work; and to continue to support some of the poublic causes to which he was devoted, especially the preservation and conversation of rivers and the countryside and the encouragement of creative writing for writers of all ages and levels of attainment.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Show more...
Arts
Education,
Society & Culture
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Ted Hughes and Education 2: Max Raab
The Ted Hughes Society Podcast
21 minutes 15 seconds
12 months ago
Ted Hughes and Education 2: Max Raab

This is the second Ted Hughes Society podcast in season three and also the second in our series on Ted Hughes and Education. Our guest contributor for this podcast is Max Raab. After a career in investment banking, Max Raab enrolled as an MA student on the Poetics of Imagination course at Dartington Arts School, Devon. In this podcast, Max talks about his experience of creating Who or What Is Crow? a project based on interviews with storytellers, folklorists and scholars of Ted Hughes. 


Towards the end of this podcast, Max hoped to read two of his favourite poems from Crow: ‘Crow Blacker Than Ever’ and ‘How Water Began To Play’. For copyright reasons this wasn’t possible, but Max did record his thoughts on both poems. If you have a copy of either Crow or the Collected Poems of Ted Hughes  at hand you might want to have the poems ready to read for yourself. You can find ‘Crow Blacker than Ever’ on page 62 of the anniversary edition of Crow,  published in 2020 by Faber and Faber, and ‘How Water Began to Play’ on page 87; and in the 2003 edition of The Collected Poems of Ted Hughes edited by Paul Keegan and published by Faber and Faber ‘Crow Blacker Than Ever’ is on page 244 and ‘How Water Began To Play’ on page 257. There is also an edited recording of a Webinar on Ted Hughes’s Crow featuring contributions from a number of the people Max interviewed on the You Tube channel of Pembroke College, Cambridge, and which you can find here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WnJ2c8iJRBc


In the podcast Max cites as a major influence on his project the Belorusian journalist and author Svetlana Alexandrovna Alexievich, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2015. Alexievich has crafted non-fiction narratives of oral history from the statements of witnesses to some of the darkest episodes in the history of the Soviet Union and the Russian Federation. English translations of her work include: Zinky Boys: Soviet Voices from the Afghanistan War (1992) translated by Julia and Robin Whitby and published by W. W. Norton; Chernobyl Prayers: Voices from Chernobyl (2016) translated by Ann Gunin and Arch Tait and published by Penguin; and The Unwomanly Face of War: An Oral History of Women in World War II (2018), translated by Larissa Volokhonsky and Richard Peaver and published by Penguin. 


If you would like to find out more about the Ted Hughes Society, you can visit the society’s website at thetedhugessociety.org, or you can email me, Mick Gowar, at membership@thetedhughessociety.org


The opening and closing music is from Beethoven's String Quartet No 14, opus 131, performed by the Orion String Quartet. (The extract is reproduced under Creative Commons licence IMSLP: Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivative 3.0.) 


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Ted Hughes Society Podcast
This podcast is dedicated to the life and work of Ted Hughes. Its aims are to promote the understanding and appreciation of his writing, especially in schools and universities; to support research and scholarship into his life and work; and to continue to support some of the poublic causes to which he was devoted, especially the preservation and conversation of rivers and the countryside and the encouragement of creative writing for writers of all ages and levels of attainment.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.