From prison breaks to VR dinosaurs: insights from the AHRC & 麻豆社's scheme for academics.
Biographers of Tom Stoppard, Sylvia Pankhurst and a little known SS soldier compare notes.
Catherine Fletcher measures the impact of Monteverdi's real and fictional female figures.
Preti Taneja on the architectural links between Letchworth Garden City and New Delhi.
Fern Riddell discusses suffragette Kitty Marion. Plus Gregory Tate on science and poetry.
The travels of the first Englishman in India, and the hunt for a lost poetic masterpiece.
Susan Greaney draws parallels between ancient peoples of Britain and Japan
Alasdair Cochrane explores the ethical implications of evolution in Thomas Hardy's writing
Eleanor Rosamund Barraclough explores how different cultures have viewed the apocalypse.
Corin Throsby explores the cultural and social impact of 1816's extreme weather.
Matthew Sweet explores what fed into Orwell's future vision and how our own is shaping up.
Julian Baggini, Tiffany Watt Smith and Christopher Harding with Rana Mitter.
Dr Sophie Coulombeau explores the limits of children's literature.
Two NGAs ask: is it wrong to have children? Do terrorists have a problem with Shakespeare?
Features about lost modernist poet Hope Mirlees and North Africa's Jews during WWII.
Alexandra Harris & Chris Stewart scramble past lemon trees in Virginia Woolf's footsteps.
Sean Williams takes a first-class journey through the enduring contradictions of luxury.
Professor Emma Griffin turns to history to debunk what she calls the Motherhood Myth.
Medical historian Matthew Smith explores 1970s US psychiatry: a time of hope and promise.
In search of the Tomb of Alexander the Great, and The Voice and the Machine.
An alternative look at modern Japan's uneasy relationship with ghosts and ghost stories.
New Generation Thinker Will Abberley reflects on how we imagine the animal mind.
Authors Nicola Upson and Joanne Ramos, and researchers Gulzaar Barn and Ella Parry-Davies.
Two Radio 3 New Generation Thinkers with stories from medieval and Victorian Britain.
Will Abberley explores the recent interest in the eerie within English culture.