Visualising War and Peace

A podcast by The University of St Andrews

Categories:

82 Episodes

  1. Mediation and Migration: from Odesa to Dundee with Hanna Dushkova

    Published: 3/15/2023
  2. The Ungrateful Refugee with Dina Nayeri

    Published: 3/8/2023
  3. 'In the Wars' with Dr Waheed Arian

    Published: 3/1/2023
  4. Photographing forced displacement with Dijana Muminovic

    Published: 2/22/2023
  5. Combating Reductive Refugee Narratives with Lina Fadel

    Published: 2/15/2023
  6. From Poland to Scotland in the wake of World War II

    Published: 2/8/2023
  7. Visualising Forced Migration through history

    Published: 2/1/2023
  8. Generation Peace: the power of storytelling in peace education

    Published: 11/23/2022
  9. Peace and Conflict in Space

    Published: 8/3/2022
  10. The Militarisation of Childhood with J. Marshall Beier

    Published: 7/6/2022
  11. Visualising Young People as Peacemakers with Helen Berents

    Published: 6/6/2022
  12. Civilian Resistance in Ukraine, 2014-2022, with Olga Boichak

    Published: 5/11/2022
  13. How can children and young people help us re-visualise war?

    Published: 3/2/2022
  14. Visualising The Next World War with Peter W. Singer and August Cole

    Published: 2/23/2022
  15. Visualising War on Film with David LaRocca

    Published: 2/16/2022
  16. Visualising War through Cosplay with Katarina Birkedal

    Published: 2/9/2022
  17. World of Warcraft with Taliesin and Evitel

    Published: 2/4/2022
  18. Visualisations of War in Online Gaming with Iain Donald

    Published: 2/2/2022
  19. Peacebuilding and Transitional Justice with Roddy Brett

    Published: 1/26/2022
  20. The Just War Tradition with Anthony Lang Jr and Rory Cox

    Published: 1/19/2022

2 / 5

How do war stories work? And what do they do to us? Join University of St Andrews historian Alice König and colleagues as they explore how war and peace get presented in art, text, film and music. With the help of expert guests, they unpick conflict stories from all sorts of different periods and places. And they ask how the tales we tell and the pictures we paint of peace and war influence us as individuals and shape the societies we live in.

Visit the podcast's native language site