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Explore every episode of the podcast The Long and Short
Dive into the complete episode list for The Long and Short. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Long and Short: Elizabeth Bowen's short stories | 24 Dec 2023 | 00:11:27 | |
In the final episode of the Long and Short, we turn to Elizabeth Bowen, widely considered one of the finest writers of the short story. Mark and Seamus unpack âthe Bowen effectâ and her singularly haunting style: subtle social commentary cut through with humour, and occasionally outright romanticism. A culmination of the short fiction explored in this series, Bowenâs work proves that life âwith the lid onâ can be just as exhilarating, moving and funny as any sensationalist story.
Non-subscribers will only hear an extract from this episode. To listen in full, and all our other Close Readings series, sign up:
Directly in Apple Podcasts: â â https://lrb.me/tlasappleâ â
In other podcast apps: â â https://lrb.me/tlassignuppodâ
Stories discussed in this episode:
âThe Parrotâ
âJoining Charlesâ
âThe Needlecaseâ
âMysterious KĂ´râ
âThe Demon Loverâ
Further reading in the LRB:
â â John Bayleyâ â
â â David Trotterâ â
â â Tessa Hadleyâ â
â â Sean O'Faolainâ | |||
| The Long and Short: Alice Oswaldâs âDartâ and âMemorialâ | 24 Nov 2023 | 00:11:50 | |
The eleventh episode of the Long and Short brings us to the present day and the distant past, as we turn to two multivocal, monumental poems by Alice Oswald. The dazzlingly polyphonic Dart (2002) celebrates the voices of the river Dart, and the people, animals and supernatural forces entwined with it. Memorial (2011) translates and transfigures the Iliad, stripping back the narrative to reveal the epicâs âbright unbearable realityâ. Mark and Seamus explore the thematic throughlines in Oswaldâs work, unpicking allusions and influences at play in these poems.
Non-subscribers will only hear an extract from this episode. To listen in full, and all our other Close Readings series, sign up:
Directly in Apple Podcasts: â â https://lrb.me/tlasappleâ â
In other podcast apps: â â https://lrb.me/tlassignuppodâ
Further reading in the LRB:
â Colin Burrow: On Alice Oswaldâ
â Aingeal Clare: Outcanoeuvreâ
â Ange Mlinko: Good Jar, Bad Jarâ
â Alice Oswald: Two Poems | |||
| Walt Whitman's 'Song of Myself' | 24 Jan 2023 | 00:10:10 | |
In the second episode of the series, Mark and Seamus turn to âSong of Myselfâ, for Mark 'one of the most exciting things literature has to offer'. They discuss the extraordinary physicality and exuberance of this seminal American poem, its relationship with urbanism, capitalism and sexuality, and its Johnny Appleseed-spirit, among many other things.
Non-subscribers will only hear an extract from this episode. To listen in full, and all our other Close Readings series, sign up:
Directly in Apple Podcasts: â â https://lrb.me/tlasappleâ â
In other podcast apps: â â https://lrb.me/tlassignuppodâ | |||
| Tennyson's 'Maud' | 24 Jan 2023 | 00:09:43 | |
Mark Ford and Seamus Perry start their series, The Long and Short, with Tennysonâs âMaudâ, a weird and disturbing poem about obsession that Tennyson himself was obsessed by. He would recite it in full at the drop of a hat, sometimes more than once, to friends and foes alike â even though it received notoriously bad reviews when it was published. This episode considers why the poem meant so much to him, and what it tells us about the Victorian age.
Non-subscribers will only hear an extract from this episode. To listen in full, and all our other Close Readings series, sign up:
Directly in Apple Podcasts: â https://lrb.me/tlasappleâ
In other podcast apps: â https://lrb.me/tlassignuppodâ
Read more on Tennyson in the LRB:
Seamus Perry:
https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v33/n02/seamus-perry/are-we-there-yet
Danny Karlin:
https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v09/n20/danny-karlin/tennyson-s-text | |||
| Introducing The Long and Short | 02 Jan 2023 | 00:08:40 | |
Seamus Perry and Mark Ford introduce their series on long poems and short stories from the 19th and 20th centuries, and talk about some of the ideas which will underpin their twelve episodes.
The authors discussed in the series will be: Alfred Tennyson, Henry James, D.H. Lawrence, Katherine Mansfield, James Joyce, Elizabeth Bowen, Nella Larson, Langston Hughes, Walt Whitman, Allen Ginsberg, Ted Hughes and Alice Oswald. | |||
| Nella Larsen's 'Passing' and Langston Hughes's 'Montage of a Dream Deferred' | 23 Oct 2023 | 00:11:40 | |
In the tenth episode of the series, Seamus and Mark turn to two figures of the Harlem Renaissance. Nella Larsenâs Passing is a taut, tense and tartly stylish take on the Jamesian short story, redolent with ironies and ambiguities, that feels just as relevant today. Widely considered his masterwork, Langston Hughesâs âMontage of a Dream Deferredâ draws on the modernist tradition, a documentarian sensibility and the freedoms of bebop to capture the multiplicity of Harlem voices.
Non-subscribers will only hear an extract from this episode. To listen in full, and all our other Close Readings series, sign up:
Directly in Apple Podcasts: â â https://lrb.me/tlasappleâ â
In other podcast apps: â â https://lrb.me/tlassignuppodâ
Further reading in the LRB:
â Amber Medland: They Roared with Laughterâ
â Lewis Nkosi: An Unamerican in New Yorkâ
â James Campbell: White Liesâ
â Joanna Biggs: What She Wasn't | |||
| Ted Hughesâs âGaudeteâ | 23 Sep 2023 | 00:12:52 | |
Originally conceived as a film script, Gaudete is Ted Hughesâs apocalyptic vision of an English village in the throes of pagan forces. While it may be âthe weirdest poem by a very weird poetâ, as Mark puts it in this episode, Gaudete shines a light on many Hughesian preoccupations and paved the way for his best-selling collection, Birthday Letters. A strange fusion of Twin Peaks and Midsomer Murders, Gaudete is the former Poet Laureate at his most uninhibited and brilliant.
Non-subscribers will only hear an extract from this episode. To listen in full, and all our other Close Readings series, sign up:
Directly in Apple Podcasts: â â https://lrb.me/tlasappleâ â
In other podcast apps: â â https://lrb.me/tlassignuppodâ | |||
| James Joyce's âDublinersâ | 23 Aug 2023 | 00:10:24 | |
James Joyce wrote most of the short stories in his landmark collection, Dubliners, when he was still in his 20s, but a tortuous publishing history, during which printers refused or pulped them for their profanity, meant they werenât published until 1914, when Joyce was 33. In their eighth episode, Mark and Seamus discuss the astonishing confidence of Joyceâs early work, which not only launched his literary career, but also initiated the grand project of his writing life. In Dubliners, the reader experiences already the vastness of Joyceâs literary imagination, his harsh criticism of the Catholic Church, his shameless plundering of the lives of his contemporaries, and a writerâs self-conscious vocation to âforge the uncreated conscience of his raceâ.
Non-subscribers will only hear an extract from this episode. To listen in full, and all our other Close Readings series, sign up:
Directly in Apple Podcasts: â â https://lrb.me/tlasappleâ â
In other podcast apps: â â https://lrb.me/tlassignuppodâ
Stories discussed in this episode:
'The Sisters'
'Clay'
'Two Gallants'
'A Little Cloud'
'A Painful Case'
'Ivy Day in the Committee Room'
'The Dead'
Further reading in the LRB:
â John Bayley: Our Founderâ
â Tim Parks: Joyce and Companyâ
â Roy Foster: tarry eastyâ
â Colm TĂłibĂn: His Spittin' Image | |||
| Allen Ginsbergâs âHowlâ and âKaddishâ | 23 Jul 2023 | 00:11:35 | |
Seamus and Mark step into the counterculture with two long poems, âHowlâ and âKaddishâ, by Allen Ginsberg, a Beat poet-celebrity with a utopian vision for an America rescued from its corrupted institutions and vested interests. Published in 1956, âHowlâ influenced post-war culture like no other literary work, a mind-expanded free-verse jeremiad that is also a celebratory poem of absolute ruin, it offered a restless generation a seductive escape from what Lowell called the âtranquillised fiftiesâ. In his intensely confessional 1961 poem âKaddishâ, a eulogy to his dead mother, Ginsberg offered a graphic account of his traumatic childhood and evolution that plugged directly into his eraâs obsession with subjectivity.
Seamus and Mark discuss some of Ginsbergâs influences â including Whitman, Carlos Williams, OâHara and Blake â and the far-reaching impact of his work, as well as Markâs own experiences meeting the poet.
Non-subscribers will only hear an extract from this episode. To listen in full, and all our other Close Readings series, sign up:
Directly in Apple Podcasts: â â https://lrb.me/tlasappleâ â
In other podcast apps: â â https://lrb.me/tlassignuppodâ | |||
| D.H. Lawrence's short stories | 23 Jun 2023 | 00:11:31 | |
Controversial, compulsive, and overwhelmingly charismatic, D.H. Lawrence continues to exert an undeniable magnetism through his novels and poetry. But, as Mark argues in this episode, the quintessential Lawrence lies in his shorter fiction. Focusing on five stories that span Lawrenceâs career, Mark and Seamus discuss the strange mix of uninhibitedness and meticulous detail that make Lawrenceâs work essential reading.
Non-subscribers will only hear an extract from this episode. To listen in full, and all our other Close Readings series, sign up:
Directly in Apple Podcasts: â â https://lrb.me/tlasappleâ â
In other podcast apps: â â https://lrb.me/tlassignuppodâ
Stories discussed in this episode:
âOdour of Chrysanthemumsâ
âThe Prussian Officerâ
âEngland, my Englandâ
âThe Blind Manâ
âThe Rocking-Horse Winnerâ | |||
| Hart Crane's 'The Bridge' | 23 May 2023 | 00:10:07 | |
In their fifth episode, Mark and Seamus reach their first 20th century poet of the series, the Ohio-born, New York-loving ad man Hart Crane, and his epic 1930 work The Bridge. Directly inspired by The Waste Land, The Bridge sought to address modernity, as Eliot had done, with all its conflicts, contradictions and difficulties, but infuse it with a Whitman-esque expression of American greatness.
Mark and Seamus discuss Craneâs multi-faceted mythologisation of the bridge, the baroque complexity of his language, the deployment of Robert Browning and Gerard Manley Hopkins in service of his questing American origin story, and the personal struggles of a man who, for his brief life, found himself in the exhilarating creative centre of modernist experimentation.
Non-subscribers will only hear an extract from this episode. To listen in full, and all our other Close Readings series, sign up:
Directly in Apple Podcasts: â â https://lrb.me/tlasappleâ â
In other podcast apps: â â https://lrb.me/tlassignuppodâ
Read more in the LRB:
â Adam Philips: Roaring Boyâ
â Michael Hofmann: Three Poemsâ
â Mark Ford: Two Poems | |||
| Katherine Mansfield's short stories | 23 Apr 2023 | 00:11:33 | |
In episode four, we turn to the squarely modernist Katherine Mansfield, whose writing famously attracted the envy of Virginia Woolf. Mark and Seamus discuss the decisive break modernist story makes from its 19th century predecessors, exemplified in Mansfieldâs work. At turns lyrical, ruthless, moving and darkly comic, these stories demonstrate her knack for close observation and mimicry â no wonder one of them is Markâs âdesert islandâ story.
Non-subscribers will only hear an extract from this episode. To listen in full, and all our other Close Readings series, sign up:
Directly in Apple Podcasts: â â https://lrb.me/tlasappleâ â
In other podcast apps: â â https://lrb.me/tlassignuppodâ | |||
| Henry Jamesâs short stories | 24 Mar 2023 | 00:09:50 | |
The third episode turns to the short stories of Henry James, looking in particular at âThe Aspern Papersâ which, like Tennysonâs âMaudâ, offers a diagnosis of obsession, in this case through a sensuous, excruciating and often comedic Venetian psychodrama. Mark and Seamus discuss the emergence of the short story at the end of the 19th century, and how certain features of the form â its attachment to unresolved endings, its debt to the dramatic monologue â can be found in Jamesâs own stories, along with his other major themes, such as the tortured relationship between the public and private, and the experience of Americans in Europe.
Non-subscribers will only hear an extract from this episode. To listen in full, and all our other Close Readings series, sign up:
Directly in Apple Podcasts: â â https://lrb.me/tlasappleâ â
In other podcast apps: â â https://lrb.me/tlassignuppodâ | |||
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