Past Present Future

A podcast by David Runciman

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153 Episodio

  1. Fifteen Fictions for Summer re-release: Gulliver’s Travels

    Pubblicato: 19/08/2024
  2. Fifteen Fictions for Summer re-release: Coriolanus

    Pubblicato: 18/08/2024
  3. What If… The Vietnam War Had Ended in 1964?

    Pubblicato: 18/08/2024
  4. What If… The Vietnam War Had Ended in 1964?

    Pubblicato: 18/08/2024
  5. What If… Wallace not Truman Had Become US President in 1945?

    Pubblicato: 15/08/2024
  6. What If… The French Revolution Had Happened in China?

    Pubblicato: 11/08/2024
  7. What If… Science Counterfactuals w/ Adam Rutherford

    Pubblicato: 08/08/2024
  8. The Great Political Fictions: Tim Rice on Evita

    Pubblicato: 04/08/2024
  9. The Great Political Fictions: Helen Lewis on To Kill A Mockingbird

    Pubblicato: 01/08/2024
  10. The Great Political Fictions: Lea Ypi on The Wild Duck

    Pubblicato: 28/07/2024
  11. The Great Political Poems

    Pubblicato: 25/07/2024
  12. American Elections: The Republican Convention

    Pubblicato: 21/07/2024
  13. The Great Political Fictions: Hamilton

    Pubblicato: 18/07/2024
  14. The Great Political Fictions: American Wife

    Pubblicato: 14/07/2024
  15. The Great Political Fictions: The Line of Beauty

    Pubblicato: 11/07/2024
  16. UK General Elections: 2024

    Pubblicato: 06/07/2024
  17. UK General Elections: 2019

    Pubblicato: 04/07/2024
  18. UK General Elections: 1997

    Pubblicato: 03/07/2024
  19. UK General Elections: 1979

    Pubblicato: 30/06/2024
  20. UK General Elections: 1945

    Pubblicato: 27/06/2024

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Past Present Future is a bi-weekly History of Ideas podcast with David Runciman, host and creator of Talking Politics, exploring the history of ideas from politics to philosophy, culture to technology. David talks to historians, novelists, scientists and many others about where the most interesting ideas come from, what they mean, and why they matter. Ideas from the past, questions about the present, shaping the future. Brought to you in partnership with the London Review of Books. New episodes every Thursday and Sunday.

Visit the podcast's native language site