In 1943, 13-year-old Zuzana Justman and her family are sent to Theresienstadt, a transit camp and ghetto in occupied Czechoslovakia. While the Nazis claim Theresienstadt was a model ghetto with a thriving cultural life, Zuzana and her family face starvation, illness, and fear of the mysterious transports that take her loved ones away, never to return. Learn more at www.lbi.org/justman . Exile is a production of the Leo Baeck Institute, New York and Antica Productions. Itâs narrated by Mandy Patinkin. This episode was produced by Rami Tzabar. Our executive Producers are Laura Regehr, Rami Tzabar, Stuart Coxe, and Bernie Blum. Our associate producer is Emily Morantz. Research and translation by Isabella Kempf. Sound design and audio mix by Philip Wilson. Theme music by Oliver Wickham. Special thanks to the German Federal Archives, the Guardian, Will Coley, The International Festival of Slavic Music for the use of their 2018 performance of Hans Krasaâs Brundibar, as well as Zuzana Justman for the use of her film, Voices of the Children. This episode of Exile is made possible in part by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, which is supported by the German Federal Ministry of Finance and the Foundation Remembrance, Responsibility and Future.âŠ
Podcasts, die es wert sind, gehört zu werden
GESPONSERT
Temple Bar Gallery + Studios (TBG+S) is a leading artistsâ studio complex and contemporary art gallery in Dublin City Centre. Founded in 1983 - by artists, for artists. At Temple Bar Gallery + Studios, we place artists at the centre of what we do. Our mission is to support the development of artists and the creation of art. We achieve this through high quality studio provision and an ambitious exhibition programme. We support an inclusive environment of learning and creativity and nurture cl ...
âŠ
continue reading
âŠ
continue reading
A collection of talks and articles by Thomas S. Monson
âŠ
continue reading
![Artwork](/static/images/128pixel.png)
1
The Slave Is Gone: The Show That Talks Back to AppleTV+'s Dickinson
Jericho Brown, Brionne Janae, and AĂfe Murray
Acclaimed poets Jericho Brown and Brionne Janae join forces with ârogue scholarâ AĂfe Murray for a podcast that celebrates what works and breaks down what doesnât in this award-winning and popular series. They interrogate what's historically and emotionally true in each episode of Dickinson -- and always bring it back to the poems that continue to intrigue, attract, and inspire.
âŠ
continue reading
![Artwork](/static/images/128pixel.png)
1
Book Launch: Solstice Arts Centre presents Isabel Nolan in conversation with Francis Halsall
32:35
Solstice Arts Centre presented the launch of a new book A DELICATE BOND WHICH IS ALSO A GAP by Isabel Nolan at Temple Bar Gallery + Studios 7 March 2024. Artist Isabel Nolan is in conversation with Francis Halsall, writer, lecturer and co-Director of Art in the Contemporary World Masters Programme, NCAD, Dublin. A DELICATE BOND WHICH IS ALSO A GAP âŠ
âŠ
continue reading
![Artwork](/static/images/128pixel.png)
1
Talk: The Paradoxes of Drawing with Brian Fay and Jan-Philipp Fruehsorge
1:03:19
1:03:19
SpÀter Spielen
SpÀter Spielen
Listen
GefÀllt mir
Geliked
1:03:19A talk with international curator Jan-Philipp Fruehsorge and TBG+ Studio Artist Brian Fay hosted by Temple Bar Gallery + Studios for National Drawing Day.Thinking about contemporary drawing practices internationally and in Ireland this talk explores the innate paradoxes in drawing now: why is drawing described as something special and not at the saâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
In association with the Douglas Hyde Gallery of Contemporary Art, Temple Bar Gallery + Studios presents an artist talk with representatives of Ireland at Venice, Eva Rothschild (2019) and Niamh O'Malley (2022). The conversation, mediated by Kate Strain of Kunstverein Aughrim, reflects on their exhibitions for the Irish Pavilion as Irelandâs represeâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
Dickinson Season One ends with a funeral, a wedding, and another Funeral, in Emilyâs brain. Is Emily subconsciously guilty about her relationship with Sue? Was Mrs. Dickinson a lush? Did George Gould really go for gold? And why are season finales so difficult? Plus, new poems from our cohosts â and the Dickinson verse that launched #emisueforevermoâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
In the finale of Dickinson, Season One, Emily gives Sue a poem so small she has to use a magnifying glass to read it. On this bonus episode, Jericho, Breezy and Aife explore Emily Dickinson's radical experimentation with what we'd now call "mixed media" â using the skills of women's work the AppleTV+ series portrays her as not possessing. +++ That âŠ
âŠ
continue reading
A solar eclipse darkens the skies over Amherst. Is it a miracle of God's creation? A disturbing omen? Or just a great place to take a date? In the series' most emotionally wrenching episode so far, Emily grapples with all these possibilities â and ends up begging Death to let Ben live. Breezy, Jericho, and AĂfe, joined by special guest and two-timeâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
It's Christmas Eve at the Dickinsons, and they've got visitors, including bestselling author Louisa May Alcott (on a runner's high) and just-returned-from-Spain Aunt Lavinia (experiencing widow's euphoria). Conspicuously absent (though perhaps not missed) is Edward Dickinson, who heads off to DC â but not without leaving a double-edged gift for EmiâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
On Friday, we release bonus material that takes you deeper into the world of Emily Dickinson, and the work of our guest poets. This week Evie Shockley talks about the complexities of Zora Neale Hurston's legacy â and how Black women writers have found meanings and possibilities in Emily Dickinson's poetry far beyond what Dickinson might have had inâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
Itâs Election Day, and Rep. Edward Dickinson is showing his true colors, culminating in a literal blow to Emily. Was Edward Dickinson dead set against his daughter becoming a poet? Can his refusal to embrace abolitionism be traced to the fact that both his and his wife's family fortunes depended on enslaved labor? And if her family hadn't profited âŠ
âŠ
continue reading
Death was a constant presence in 19th century America, including Emily Dickinson's Amherst. But if you were poor, Black, or indigenous â or all three â the risk of death from illness and overwork was much greater. As our rogue scholar AĂfe Murray describes in this bonus conversation, the prominent citizens of Amherst, including Emily's father EdwarâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
Emily feigns mortal illness so her family will leave her alone in her room to write. Sue, who's already suffered so much loss, hurries back from Boston to visit what she thinks is her friend and lover's deathbed, only to find it's a hoax. And to make it worse, Emily chooses this moment to tell Sue she should marry Austin, her possessiveness apparenâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
In this special episode, cohost Jericho Brown is in conversation with Alena Smith, creator and show runner of AppleTV+'s Dickinson. They go inside the making of the show, and why Emily Dickinson's life and poems continue to inspire. +++ Poems in this episode: You cannot put a fire out by Emily Dickinson The Soul selects her own Society by Emily DicâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
For Election Day, we're sharing a bit of our recent conversation with poet and scholar Evie Shockley, who shares her poem women's voting rights at 100 (but who's counting?) and talks with Jericho Brown about why, in spite of our democracy's shortcomings and outrages and betrayals, we vote.+++Featured in this episode:Evie Shockley: women's voting riâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
On Fridays, we bring you bonus material that takes you deeper into the work of our poets, and the world of Emily Dickinson. This week, Jericho asks about the Dickinson men and the Civil War, and Aife reveals the fascinating (and when you look straight at them, shocking) details of Austin Dickinson's absolutely legal evasion of the draft.âŠ
âŠ
continue reading
On Fridays, we bring you bonus materials that take you into the worlds of Emily Dickinson and our poets. This time, it's Jericho on James Baldwin, racial insult, and just wanting to have this drink.
âŠ
continue reading
Every Friday, we release bonus material that takes you deeper into the world of Emily Dickinson, and the work of our poets. This week, our Rogue Scholar Aife Murray asks Jericho Brown, Brionne Janae, and special guest Malcolm Tariq about where they first found their voice. And all three recounted experiences from the Black churches of their childhoâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
There are rumors there's a fugitive slave in Amherst, which means the the threat of the slavecatcher hangs over all Black people in the town, including the Dickinsons' hired hand Henry. So how does Emily respond? By encouraging Henry to play Othello in her Shakespeare Club's latest production! George, having been rebuffed by Emily, decides to take âŠ
âŠ
continue reading
Every Friday, we release bonus material that takes you deeper into the world of Emily Dickinson, and the work of our guest poets.In Season 1, Episode 4 of Dickinson, Emily has a disappointing encounter with one of her literary heroes, Henry David Thoreau. In this bonus episode, Jericho, Breezy and US Poet Laureate Ada LimĂłn reflect on poets (CarolyâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
Emily's father scoffs at her objection to cutting down an old tree to make way for the railroad, sending her (and suitor George) on a pilgrimage to to see Henry David Thoreau, a visit that ends in disappointment. Should we be disappointed in the portrayal of Thoreau? Why does Emily's sister Lavinia play at being an Indian? Who are the real indigenoâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
Every Friday, we release bonus material that takes you deeper into the world of Emily Dickinson, and the work of our guest poets. This week, Danez Smith talks with Breezy and Jericho about why the title on the cover of their latest book (Homie) is not its real title, and what that has to do with language, access, and who you're writing for. And in âŠ
âŠ
continue reading
A party jumps off at the Dickinsons, and raises lots of questions: Were they taking opium in 19th century Massachusetts? How did the son of a samurai end up there? What's with the colorblind twerking? And why doesn't anybody seem to understand Sue? Plus, the perils of poetry about Black death in a world of white readers. Breezy, Jericho, and Aife, âŠ
âŠ
continue reading
Every Friday, we release bonus material that takes you deeper into the work of our guest poets, and the world of Emily Dickinson. The story of Angeline Palmer reveals how tenuous freedom was for Black people, even in the Yankee North -- and how the Dickinsons weren't exactly reliable allies.
âŠ
continue reading
What do we know about the reality of domestic servants in the Dickinson household, and about Maggie in particular? How was cross-dressing different when the emotional worlds of men and women were sharply separated? And as Emily erupts, sexually and poetically, Jericho asks: Where was queer TV like this when I needed it? Breezy, Jericho, and Aife, jâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
Emily and Sue share a rain-soaked kiss -- what's the historical truth of their queer relationship? How can Emily not realize her father will flip out about her publishing her poems? Why do the first lines from a Black character come from Wiz Khalifa as Death? And how to react to a privileged young white woman who says "I'm a slave"? Jericho, BreezyâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
Season One of The Slave is Gone is finally here! Get a taste of what Jericho, Breezy, and Aife will be talking about with guest poets including Rage Hezekiah, Danez Smith, and US Poet Laureate Ada LimĂłn.
âŠ
continue reading
Soundwork by Richy Carey, with sections taken from the exhibition 'Galalith' by Lauren Gault.Lauren Gaultâs exhibition, Galalith, is an expanded staging of her sculptural installations, responding to Temple Bar Gallery + Studios internal gallery space and the buildingâs external, environmental context.The exhibition incorporates sunlight caught by âŠ
âŠ
continue reading
Tamsin Snow | On Ice | Soundtrack by Temple Bar Gallery + StudiosVon Temple Bar Gallery + Studios
âŠ
continue reading
Artist Lucy McKenzie takes part in an online conversation with Curator PĂĄdraic E. Moore on the occasion of her solo exhibition, Tour Donas.Featuring paintings, sculptures and elements of dĂ©cor, this exhibition highlights the heterogeneity of McKenzie's practice. Weaving together fragments of art historical narratives with topical contemporary subjeâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
The National Museum of Ireland â Natural History (or âDead Zooâ) has been a major source of inspiration for Mairead OâhEocha in her solo exhibition Tale Ends & Eternal Wakes. OâhEocha recently spoke with Nigel Monaghan, Keeper of the Museum, about some of the fascinating historic stories and collections the museum holds, as well as its contemporaryâŠ
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - April 1971 Tuesday Morning SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - October 1971 Sunday Afternoon SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - April 1972 Saturday Morning SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - October 1972 Sunday Afternoon SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - April 1973 Saturday Morning SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - October 1973 Friday Afternoon SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - April 1974 Saturday Morning SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - April 1975 Friday Morning SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - October 1976 Saturday Afternoon SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - April 1977 Sunday Afternoon SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - October 1977 Saturday Morning SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - April 1978 Saturday Afternoon SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - Saturday Afternoon Session October 1981Von www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - April 1982 Sunday Morning SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - October 1982 Saturday Afternoon SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - April 1983 Sunday Morning SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - October 1983 Saturday Afternoon SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - April 1984 Saturday Morning SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - October 1984 Priesthood SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - April 1985 Sunday Morning SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading
Thomas S. Monson - October 1985 Saturday Afternoon SessionVon www.ldspodcasts.com
âŠ
continue reading