Time To Eat The Dogs

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 129:04:44
  • More information

Informações:

Synopsis

A podcast about science, history, and exploration. Michael Robinson interviews scientists, journalists, and adventurers about life at the extreme.

Episodes

  • How Isolated Tribes Fight Back

    27/11/2018 Duration: 24min

    Scott Wallace talks about his recent trip to Brazil reporting on the efforts of the Guajajara people to protect uncontacted tribes from loggers, miners, and poachers.

  • Backpack Ambassadors

    23/11/2018 Duration: 33min

    Richard Ivan Jobs talks about the rise of backpacking in Europe after the Second World War, a phenomenon that contributed to the political integration of Europe during the 1960s and 1970s (rebroadcast). 

  • Into the Extreme

    20/11/2018 Duration: 32min

    Valerie Olson talks about why the idea of outer space as a "frontier" is giving way to one that frames it as a cosmic ecosystem. Olson is an associate professor of anthropology at University of California, Irvine. She is the author of Into the Extreme: U.S. Environmental Systems and Politics Beyond Earth.

  • Searching for Hobbits

    17/11/2018 Duration: 32min

    Paige Madison talks about her work at the Liang Bua cave in Indonesia where she studies Homo Floresiensis as well as the team of researchers who have worked at the cave for years, sometimes for generations.

  • The Psychology of Extreme Environments

    15/11/2018 Duration: 31min

    Nathan Smith discusses the psychology of exploration, specifically the psychology of performance in extreme environments. Smith worked closely with polar explorer Ben Saunders in 2013 as Saunders attempted to complete Robert Falcon Scott's trek to the South Pole and back.

  • Lands of Lost Borders

    12/11/2018 Duration: 28min

    Kate Harris -- writer, scientist, and extreme cyclist – talks about the trip she made with her friend Mel, tracing Marco Polo’s route across Central Asia and Tibet. The journey is the subject of Harris’s book, Lands of Lost Borders: a Journey on the Silk Road (rebroadcast).

  • The Identity of the Traveler

    06/11/2018 Duration: 40min

    Joyce Ashuntantang talks about her experiences as a traveler and a poet, from her childhood Cameroon to her years studying in Great Britain and the United States. Ashuntantang is a professor of English at Hillyer College, University of Hartford. She is the author of many works of poetry, including Beautiful Fire, published this year with Spears Media Press.

  • The Archaeology of Exploration

    30/10/2018 Duration: 37min

    Anthropologist P.J. Capelotti discusses the role of exploration archaeology in understanding the Pacific voyage of Kon-Tiki, the Arctic airship expeditions of Walter Wellman, and the fate of Orca II, a fishing boat used in the film Jaws.

  • Women, Aviation, and Global Air Travel

    24/10/2018 Duration: 30min

    Emily Gibson talks about women, aviation, and global air travel. Gibson is an associate historian at the National Science Foundation.

  • The New Map of Empire

    16/10/2018 Duration: 33min

    Historian Max Edelson talk about the British Board of Trade’s ambitious project to explore and survey British America from the St Lawrence River to the islands of the Caribbean.

  • Making Planets into Places

    09/10/2018 Duration: 41min

    Anthropologist Lisa Messeri talks about planetary scientists and the way they use data to bring these places to life. Messeri is the author of Placing Out Space: An Earthly Ethnography of Other Worlds.

  • The Making of 2001: A Space Odyssey

    02/10/2018 Duration: 34min

    Michael Benson talks about the making of 2001, a movie inspired by the collaboration of American director Stanley Kubrick and the British futurist Arthur C. Clark.

  • Science and Exploration in the U.S. Navy

    27/09/2018 Duration: 33min

    Jason Smith discusses the U.S. Navy’s role in exploring and charting the ocean world. Smith is an assistant professor of history at Southern Connecticut State University. He’s the author of To Master the Boundless Sea: The U.S. Navy, the Marine Environment, and the Cartography of Empire.  

  • After the Map

    18/09/2018 Duration: 32min

    Bill Rankin talks about the changes brought about by GPS and other mapping technologies in the twentieth century. Rankin is the author of After the Map: Cartography, Navigation, and the Transformation of Territory in the Twentieth Century.

  • Living on the International Space Station

    11/09/2018 Duration: 32min

    Astronaut Garrett Reisman talks about life aboard the International Space Station. Reisman flew on two shuttle missions to the station and conducted three seven-hour spacewalks during his 107 days in space.

  • One Long Night

    04/09/2018 Duration: 35min

    Andrea Pitzer talks about her book One Long Night: A Global History of Concentration Camps, one of the Smithsonian’s Ten Best History Books for 2017

  • Searching for Hobbits

    28/08/2018 Duration: 32min

    Paige Madison talks about her work at the Liang Bua cave in Indonesia where she studies Homo Floresiensis as well as the team of researchers who have worked at the cave for years, sometimes for generations.

  • Australians' First Encounter with Captain Cook

    21/08/2018 Duration: 32min

    Maria Nugent talks about Aboriginal Australians' first encounter with Captain Cook at Botany Bay, a violent meeting has come to represent the origin story of Australia’s colonial settlement.

  • An American in Soviet Antarctica, Part II

    15/08/2018 Duration: 32min

    Stewart Gillmor -- the sole American at Mirny Station in 1961 and 1962-- continues his discussion of life at the Soviet base: how communism plays out 10,000 miles from Moscow, the problems with planes in Antarctica, and what to do when the diesel generator dies at the coldest place in the world.

  • An American in Soviet Antarctica, Part I

    07/08/2018 Duration: 32min

    Stewart Gillmor talks about his fourteen-month stay at Mirny Station, the Soviet Union's Antarctica base. Gillmor was the sole American at Mirny in 1960-1962 during the height of the Cold War. 

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