Travels Through Time
Travels Through Time
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Mike Jay on Sigmund Freud, William James and Robert Louis Stevenson in 1885
In this episode the cultural historian Mike Jay takes Peter back to the high Victorian Age to see how a pioneering group of scholars and artists experimented with mind altering drugs.
Jay labels these characters 'psychonauts'. These were daring, romantic figures like Sigmund Freud who championed cocaine as a stimulant, and William James whose experiments with nitrous oxide brought new insights into human consciousness.
Others at this time used drugs more informally. One such person was Robert Louis Stevenson. Suffering from poor health in the mid-1880s he took advantage of the powerful drugs that were easily accessible. A result of this, Jay explains, is Dr Jeykill and Mr Hyde, one of the great short stories in English literature.
Mike Jay is the author of Psychnauts: Drugs and the Making of the Modern Mind.
For more, as ever, visit our website: tttpodcast.com.
Show notes
Scene One: January 1885, Vienna - Sigmund Freud publishes his self-experiments with cocaine.
Scene Two: March 31st 1885, Cambridge, Mass - William James in his study, corresponding with Benjamin Blood and Edmund Gurney about nitrous oxide.
Scene Three: September 1885, Bournemouth - RL Stevenson writes Jekyll & Hyde in three days.
Memento: A branded Merck vial of cocaine
People/Social
Presenter: Peter Moore
Guest: Mike Jay
Production: Maria Nolan
Podcast partner: Ace Cultural Tours
Theme music: ‘Love Token’ from the album ‘This Is Us’ By Slava and Leonard Grigoryan
Переглядів: 238

Відео

The Grigoryan Brothers: Live Music on Travels Through Time
Переглядів 1847 місяців тому
In this special episode the multi-award winning guitarists Slava and Leonard Grigoryan take us back into Australian history in three enchanting pieces of music. Each track features on their acclaimed album, This Is Us, which arose out of a collaborative project with the National Museum of Australia. Over the past two decades the Grigoryan Brothers have established themselves as among the finest...
Interview with Lucy Wooding on Tudor England in 1558
Переглядів 6397 місяців тому
This recording was made shortly after Queen Elizabeth II's death in 2022. And having watched the second Elizabethan era draw to a close, it was a fitting time to go back to the beginning of the first Elizabethan era - the moment when Mary Tudor died leaving the throne to her younger half-sister. These two queens, the first women to rule England in their own right, were divided by their faith. T...
Interview with Murray Pittock on Scotland Reborn in 1967
Переглядів 2617 місяців тому
On 2 November 1967 Winnie Ewing shocked the political establishment when she won the Scottish seat of Hamilton for the Scottish National Party. As today’s guest, Professor Murray Pittock explains, so began a month that would radically re-shape modern British politics. For British politics the 1960s was a testing time. While the country experienced its fabled cultural flowering, it simultaneousl...
Interview with Marion Turner on The Wife of Bath
Переглядів 3287 місяців тому
It is difficult to hear the stories of medieval women, but one voice rings down the ages, clear as a bell. Alison, the Wife of Bath, is Geoffrey Chaucer’s most famous creation: irrepressible, hilarious, insightful. She is the star of The Canterbury Tales with her outrageous stories and touching honesty. An inspiration for a huge range of writers - from William Shakespeare to Margaret Atwood and...
Interview with Philip Mansel on Louis XIV, The Sun King
Переглядів 3727 місяців тому
In this episode Philip Mansel takes us inside the court of King Louis XIV at Versailles, probably the most lavish, extraordinary royal palace ever built. Versailles was a place where the fun never stopped. There were parties, plays, banquets, firework displays and concerts. Life at court was a giddy carousel of extravagance, culture, beauty, wit, sophistication and intrigue. As the decorated hi...
Interview with James Holland on D-Day and the Sherwood Rangers
Переглядів 1,3 тис.7 місяців тому
This Remembrance Week the best-selling historian James Holland takes us back to a crucial year in the Second World War. We travel to Gold Beach on D-Day and then into the country lanes of Normandy on the trail of the Sherwood Rangers. * On the damp and blustery morning of 6 June 1944 the Sherwood Rangers fought their way onto Gold Beach. An armoured regiment, filled with Sherman tanks, the Sher...
Interview with Tania Branigan on Mao and the Cultural Revolution
Переглядів 2507 місяців тому
Red Memory has been shortlisted for the Bailie Gifford Prize UK's premier non-fiction prize, the winner of which will be announced in a few weeks. This interview was conducted on the book's publication in January. = In this episode the Guardian journalist Tania Branigan takes us back to the opening phases of the ‘Cultural Revolution’, Mao Zedong’s attempt to purge Chinese society of its impurit...
Interview with Nandini Das on Sir Thomas Roe and the first English embassy to India in 1616
Переглядів 5298 місяців тому
'Courting India' by Nandini Das has just been announced as the winner of the 2023 British Academy Book Prize. Here is the recording of an interview we had with her earlier this year. = The relationship between England and India is a deep and complex one. In this episode the academic and author of Courting India, Nandini Das, takes us back to a significant moment at the very beginning of this re...
Video interview with Tom Whipple on RV Jones and The Battle of the Beams in 1940
Переглядів 641Рік тому
Today Tom Whipple, science editor of The Times, takes us back to a critical moment at the beginning of World War Two. Just a month after replacing Neville Chamberlain as prime minister, Winston Churchill learned that the Nazis were using beams to direct their bombers towards targets in Britain’s industrial heartlands. The science behind these beams was so pioneering that it was difficult to bel...
Interview with John Darlington on the Port Royal Earthquake of 1692
Переглядів 1,2 тис.Рік тому
Today the archaeologist and executive director of World Monuments Fund, John Darlington, takes us on a dramatic trip back to the 1690s to witness a devastating earthquake in the Caribbean. Scroll down, too, for news of a special discount code. After its capture by the English in 1655, Port Royal, Jamaica, became a place of great significance. Home to around 6,500 people by the 1690s, it was kno...
Three Battles in Company of Heroes 3: Tobruk, Ortona and Anzio with the mission designer David Milne
Переглядів 220Рік тому
In this episode we talk to the game designer David Milne about his historical work on the hugely popular real time strategy game Company of Heroes 3. Milne takes us back to the Mediterranean theatre of World War II, from Tobruk in North Africa to Anzio in Italy, as we learn how games developers faithfully evoke the past. Company of Heroes 3 is the latest instalment in the multi-million selling ...
Interview with Sarah Bakewell on Petrach and Boccaccio
Переглядів 916Рік тому
Today the bestselling and prize-winning author Sarah Bakewell takes us back to the mid-fourteenth century. This was a time of great hardship when politics was violently fractured and when the plague was ripping across Europe. But at this singular moment in Western history two figures of genius, Petrarch and Boccaccio, started their pioneering literary work. In doing so they became, as Bakewell ...
Video interview with John Sellars on Aristotle
Переглядів 724Рік тому
This week we’re heading back to the fourth century BC to take a look at one of the world’s greatest ever philosophers. Indeed, according to today’s guest, John Sellars, Aristotle may be even more than that. He might well be the single most important human ever to have lived. Aristotle’s philosophical work transformed the people thought about the world around them. During his magnificent career ...
Interview with Simon Akam on the British Army and The Changing of the Guard
Переглядів 296Рік тому
The British Army can trace its origins back to the Acts of Union of 1707 and its rich history involves conflicts both large and small in all corners of the globe. But as the twenty-first century dawned, the organisation found itself in a transitional phase and with something of an identity crisis. What exactly was its culture? What, with its resources, could it really be expected to achieve? Wh...
Video interview with Giles Milton on Yalta and the Race for Berlin (1945)
Переглядів 542Рік тому
Video interview with Giles Milton on Yalta and the Race for Berlin (1945)
Video interview with Don Hollway on 1066 - The Year of Three Battles
Переглядів 486Рік тому
Video interview with Don Hollway on 1066 - The Year of Three Battles
Interview with Tim Clayton on James Gillray the caricaturist
Переглядів 1 тис.Рік тому
Interview with Tim Clayton on James Gillray the caricaturist
Interview with Josiah Osgood on Julius Caesar and Cato the Younger
Переглядів 2 тис.Рік тому
Interview with Josiah Osgood on Julius Caesar and Cato the Younger
Interview with Harry Sidebottom on Heliogabalus the Mad Emperor
Переглядів 1,1 тис.Рік тому
Interview with Harry Sidebottom on Heliogabalus the Mad Emperor
Interview with Paul Hayward on England's World Cup victory in 1966
Переглядів 133Рік тому
Interview with Paul Hayward on England's World Cup victory in 1966
Interview with Orlando Figes on Vladimir Putin, Russian History and the Revolution of 1917
Переглядів 4,2 тис.Рік тому
Interview with Orlando Figes on Vladimir Putin, Russian History and the Revolution of 1917
Video interview with Robert Harris on Act of Oblivion and the history of the year 1660
Переглядів 3,7 тис.Рік тому
Video interview with Robert Harris on Act of Oblivion and the history of the year 1660
Interview with Suzanne Fagence Cooper on Jane and William Morris in 1862
Переглядів 905Рік тому
Interview with Suzanne Fagence Cooper on Jane and William Morris in 1862
Travels Through Time live with Oskar Jensen at Chalke Valley History Festival
Переглядів 468Рік тому
Travels Through Time live with Oskar Jensen at Chalke Valley History Festival
Interview with Michael Wood on Alfred the Great and the Vikings in 878
Переглядів 11 тис.2 роки тому
Interview with Michael Wood on Alfred the Great and the Vikings in 878
Ronan McGreevy: The Assassination of Sir Henry Wilson MP (1922)
Переглядів 8622 роки тому
Ronan McGreevy: The Assassination of Sir Henry Wilson MP (1922)
Interview with Sam Knight on The Premonitions Bureau
Переглядів 1,2 тис.2 роки тому
Interview with Sam Knight on The Premonitions Bureau
Interview with Toby Wilkinson on the discovery of Tutankhamun's Tomb
Переглядів 2,8 тис.2 роки тому
Interview with Toby Wilkinson on the discovery of Tutankhamun's Tomb
Video interview with Felipe Fernández-Armesto on Magellan, the Age of Exploration and life in 1492
Переглядів 1,8 тис.2 роки тому
Video interview with Felipe Fernández-Armesto on Magellan, the Age of Exploration and life in 1492

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @intuitknit
    @intuitknit День тому

    Your presentation is very timely with respect to the huge corruption and upending of social order attempts in the USA at present by a tyranical candidate.

  • @jimtussing
    @jimtussing День тому

    Great discussion. I’ve always felt that Cromwell was killed when the King realized his accumulated power and independent will and, most importantly, his ability to dissemble which probably rivaled his own. The King had replaced Wolsey, no reason for him to believe he couldn’t replace Cromwell. Squandered resources.

  • @kazyczka
    @kazyczka 2 дні тому

    Knowledge of Yosiah is evident but his spin (opinion) I do not appreciate: Jan 6 almost killing REPUBLIC with armed insurectionists. I already smell DTS. otherwise I like it.

  • @anngray9171
    @anngray9171 4 дні тому

    Not unheard of. Intelligent people of UK could already foresee trouble with the USSR. You are too young to have heard this talk as a child. Many of us heard this talk. The obvious thing was for Germany to turn with us against USSR and settle their hash. Then sort the Germans. However it could not be done because of the concentration camp outrage. If the Germans had behaved in a civilised manner, things would have been very different and the world perhaps not in such a perilous state.

  • @MusiqueMonAmour
    @MusiqueMonAmour 4 дні тому

    Thank you for this very interesting discussion. I am working on Katyn Massace related topisc in Wikipedia and on the memorials of the victims on findagrave. The very much appreciate the approach chosen by Jane Rogoyska.

  • @trevorfuller1078
    @trevorfuller1078 20 днів тому

    When comparing both Monty & Bill Slim & asking whether each army-commander could have done the other’s job to the same effect & high degree, I would have said yes definitely they both could have probably performed each one’s position interchangeably, successfully . However, if the question was next asked, “Between Monty & Slim, who could have replaced Dwight D. Eisenhower as Supreme Commander of SHAEF - Europe, then disregarding nationality, political & other related issues, then I would have said only Slim would have been able to carry himself successfully in that job, as he undoubtedly possessed the personality, the diplomatic skills, the technical-nous & operational experience but additionally, Bill Slim also was a people person who could relate to either Kings, Presidents, Prime Ministers, Generals alike, but not solely exclusively to the most eminent of people, as he could equally make the newest private soldier or 2nd Lieutenant feel equally at ease in his presence too! As observed by former infantry private & subsequently junior officer George MacDanald Fraser in his book & personal recollections & reflections of his wartime experiences over the period, 1944-45 in Burma, in “Quartered Safe Out Here!” I understand in the historical context that Eisenhower’s job had to be carried out by an American General for political reasons, but what I am saying is that in other circumstances, Slim could have replaced him & done an equally credible job too!

  • @trevorfuller1078
    @trevorfuller1078 20 днів тому

    Interestingly, If you go to Lusaka, Zambia 🇿🇲, you will find that the main Army HQ there is based in Arakan Barracks, indicative & commemorative of the fact that Northern Rhodesian colonial units (Mainly, the Northern Rhodesia Regiment) served with other East African formations in India & Burma during the Second World War!

  • @Retarmy1
    @Retarmy1 20 днів тому

    I am reading the book, Brothers in Arms, it good to hear the stories about tankers, I am usa army retired M1A1 tanker

  • @Retarmy1
    @Retarmy1 20 днів тому

    I am reading the book, Brothers in Arms, it good to hear the stories about tankers, I am usa army retired M1A1 tanker

  • @SF-ru3lp
    @SF-ru3lp 21 день тому

    Fabulous interview. Thank you. G Ire

  • @ericadler9680
    @ericadler9680 Місяць тому

    "Mansplaining" is a sexist term.

  • @clairerobsin
    @clairerobsin Місяць тому

    ...as for Jan 6th: you are full of shit.

  • @catherinenelson9909
    @catherinenelson9909 Місяць тому

    Intriguing. I want to read Hillary Mantels books again.

  • @ultra_marcus
    @ultra_marcus Місяць тому

    Currently re-reading Toby's "The Rise & Fall Of Ancient Egypt". Thank you for this wonderful discussion.

  • @boogiesmell5181
    @boogiesmell5181 2 місяці тому

    So much was left out in this video, I thought this would be an in depth analysis of the death of Marlowe. A shame it derailed off topic so soon. Ingram Frizer was supposedly sitting on a bench between Robert Poley and Nicholas Skeres when Marlowe attacked him from behind with a dagger and started pummeling him, but not with the blade. Frizer claimed he was unable to move or defend himself properly as he was seated between the two others... who apparently did nothing. Somehow he was still able to get the blade from Marlowe, who would then have been unarmed, and in this three-to-one scenario Frizer would have been justified to go for the kill and stab him in the eye? Ask the Elizabethan courts and the answer is yes, absolutely. The Queen pardoned Frizer only a month after the murder, which would have been remarkably soon. Afterwards the death of Marlowe was sold to the people as divine retribution for his sins and blasphemy. The dual meaning of "the reckoning" (le recknynge, the bill) was not lost on anyone. The elite wanted Marlowe dead, the murderers knew exactly what they were doing and were sure they would be allowed to get away with it. The other playwrights knew full well at the time that there was much more to the story than the authorities would let on. Yet the atmosphere would have been so oppressive that no one dared utter a word about it. No one except for Shakespeare, who lamented Marlowe's premature and violent demise in "As You Like It" with the ambiguous lines: "When a man's verses cannot be understood nor a man's good wit seconded with the forward child, understanding, it strikes a man more dead than a great reckoning in a little room." F

  • @lazmotron
    @lazmotron 2 місяці тому

    In the author's research did she ever come across the idea that Christianity was created by a group of Alexandrian Jews?

  • @shelbythe2ds526
    @shelbythe2ds526 2 місяці тому

    Good podcast. Wish I could have heard more from Sara.

  • @francescogiordano4821
    @francescogiordano4821 2 місяці тому

    Ho letto il libro "God's shadow" di questo autore. Non capisco come un personaggio simile sia arrivato ad incarichi accademici presso Università prestigiose come Yale. Il libro, percorrendo la storia del sultano Selim I, vengono propinate interpretazioni storiche falsate o addirittura inventate allo scopo di glorificare la grandezza dell'impero ottomano e delle sue radici islamiche. Fra le altre, l'assurda teoria che Cristoforo Colombo, dipinto come un avventuriero senza scrupoli, abbia intrapreso il viaggio transatlantico allo scopo di assalire Gerusalemme da est, cogliendo di sorpresa l'Impero ottomano. Non vado oltre, ma ho verificato che i miei dubbi su quest'autore non sono isolati, ma piuttosto condivisi con altri commentatori molto più qualificati di me

  • @user-ik8nm2rr2e
    @user-ik8nm2rr2e 2 місяці тому

    God preserve us from Uncompromising principal, idealism, austerity, prigishness, narcissism and charisma; they equal disaster. Give us compromise, pragmatism and survival!

  • @serenoart
    @serenoart 2 місяці тому

    If Colin is correct that Robespierre is moving toward a more moderate position that would involve compromise with the middle, it is even more ironic that he basically killed Danton and company for the same thing

  • @PeterOConnell-pq6io
    @PeterOConnell-pq6io 2 місяці тому

    Caesar the narcissistic imperialistic populist, and Cato the fanatically stoic optimate. Talk about dropping a chunk of Caesar's sodium metal into Cato's cheap wine. Bottoms up! If memory serves, Cicero lent two hands to help end the ensuing power struggle.

  • @kelleycavan6911
    @kelleycavan6911 2 місяці тому

    I am currently listening to Neil’s podcast “The History of the World in 100 Moments”, after finishing “Love Letters the the British Isles”. I learned so very much from him - my favourite historian by far

  • @astrohaterade
    @astrohaterade 2 місяці тому

    Maybe it’s not being able to see his facial expressions, but there’s a tone of arrogance in the author’s tone that really makes it hard to listen to for too long.

  • @user-mx5uf7dr6f
    @user-mx5uf7dr6f 2 місяці тому

    On that account: We ordained for the Children of Israel that if any one slew a person - unless it be for murder or for spreading mischief in the land - it would be as if he slew the whole people: and if any one saved a life, it would be as if he saved the life of the whole people. (Koran Chapter AlMaida Vers 32) This is what motivated Dr. Helmy.

  • @derka346
    @derka346 2 місяці тому

    Im a D'Annunzio

  • @eatiegourmet1015
    @eatiegourmet1015 2 місяці тому

    I'm currently reading Pen Vogler's , and enjoying it very much. I have also ordered and I'm looking forward to receiving it. (First saw her on Ash Wednesday on GB News.) I found this podcast quite fascinating; I wish there were more people I knew that were interested in the subject, whom I could point in this direction... I'll now go check out your other offerings...

  • @eatiegourmet1015
    @eatiegourmet1015 2 місяці тому

    This podcast deserves many more views!

  • @e.f.3207
    @e.f.3207 3 місяці тому

    I just found this- That was FANTASTIC! Especially that latter half when you're both just talking about the subject and your personal thoughts and notions, brilliant 👏 Can't wait to find more! Thank you 😊

  • @voraciousreader3341
    @voraciousreader3341 3 місяці тому

    It takes a weird kind of figurative b@lls to cut into Mr. Wood’s narrative so many times, and to talk over him when he’s making important observations. I won’t be listening to other offerings, I’m thinking.

  • @Lamarck922
    @Lamarck922 3 місяці тому

    You lose all credibility when you start your video out with the statement that Russia was unprovoked. I wonder how long it would take the United States to invade Mexico or Canada if either one of them made a military alliance with China or Russia. Try thinking before running your mouth.

  • @ABC-th8zq
    @ABC-th8zq 3 місяці тому

    They weren’t just officers who were captured by soviets while retreating from the Germans. Soviets after invading Poland on 3rd September 1939, summoned all Polish army officers from the area soviets were occupying, to assemble and do a so called “roll call”. However, once the officers were assembled, they were taken as POWs. They were murdered and buried in Katyń and other places. My great-great uncle was killed in Katyn. His wife and his mother (my great-great grandmother) were deported and killed also by the soviets. They were family of a murdered Polish officer and they needed the families to also disappear.

    • @user-wo3mf1gh7i
      @user-wo3mf1gh7i Місяць тому

      3:01 3:12

    • @user-wo3mf1gh7i
      @user-wo3mf1gh7i Місяць тому

      Как звали вашего дедушку и в каких родах войск он служил?

  • @xmaseveeve5259
    @xmaseveeve5259 3 місяці тому

    Shills.

  • @kevcaratacus9428
    @kevcaratacus9428 3 місяці тому

    I love listening to prof wood. Especially about the late roman( and saxon eras. Such a clever man.

  • @lawrieflowers8314
    @lawrieflowers8314 4 місяці тому

    In 1916, in the midst of the war, Britain and France signed a secret document agreeing that if they managed to defeat the Ottomans, they would partition Palestine fairly to establish a homeland for the Jews. This was known as the Sykes Picot Agreement. It does seem rather strange that in a World War which is going quite badly for them, Britain would take time out from this extremely pressing situation to even be thinking about a rather obscure faraway land called Palestine, let alone make a firm and far-reaching declaration about it (The Balfour Declaration) in 1917. I have heard that Britain was actually in an extremely dire financial position, and had needed to turn to Jewish financiers to obtain urgent loans. And that for doing this they required the guarantee of a Jewish homeland. I’m not sure how accurate this is?

  • @user-io3ed8ij3j
    @user-io3ed8ij3j 4 місяці тому

    really interesting podcast, but spoilt by the interviewer's lack of experience!

  • @TheJennick13
    @TheJennick13 4 місяці тому

    Also was incredibly glad to hear that other people can't stand Henry VIII!!!!!!! I'm not a huge fan of the Tudor dynasty, they were all incredibly selfish, they held themselves as on the same level as European monarchs even though they were a generation old...ugh

  • @TheJennick13
    @TheJennick13 4 місяці тому

    Really enjoyed this!!!❤

  • @lindsaydavis1129
    @lindsaydavis1129 4 місяці тому

    Hi

  • @scottmclaren3928
    @scottmclaren3928 4 місяці тому

    Stop saying British. I am pretty sure Alfred isn't the the Greatest person in Scotland,wales or Northern Ireland. Typical .

  • @dragonclaws9367
    @dragonclaws9367 4 місяці тому

    When he said you're annoyed by this man staring at you I spit out my coffee. He is a wonderful storyteller, I am a huge Anne supporter and I found some room in my heart for him. ( Cromwell.)

  • @tahoeclimber
    @tahoeclimber 5 місяців тому

    Christians we’re a rival Jewish sect. Were the Christians that killed Hypatia ethnic Jews or converts?

  • @nigelsouthworth5577
    @nigelsouthworth5577 5 місяців тому

    Gosh, I just found this. Thanks so much you two.

  • @melissajensen4901
    @melissajensen4901 5 місяців тому

    So it seems that the interview with Marcus du Sautoy never happened?

  • @nebras__
    @nebras__ 5 місяців тому

    I love how he apologize for his English, but he speaks better English than 99% of English speakers around the world

  • @chas9183
    @chas9183 5 місяців тому

    Wonderful story

  • @porksterbob
    @porksterbob 5 місяців тому

    The description of the withdrawal plan is exactly how the Chinese won their few victories. Slim was the only western general to bother to ask the Chinese if there was anything they could teach about fighting Japan.

  • @sharonwhiteley6510
    @sharonwhiteley6510 5 місяців тому

    Port Royal, besides the make up of the ground, also had extremely narrow spaces between buildings. Even the "roads", were more like alleys. This helps trap people as well. The tsunami then sends ships from the harbor right into town over the collapsed buildings. Watching the sand liquefy, is like many areas in CA. Following the earthquake in San Francisco in 1906, are reports of water being squeezed out of the ground. During cleanup, San Francisco was made "bigger " by dumping debris in areas and simply built upon. When the 1989 earthquake hit, the marina area was hit especially hard followed by fire.

  • @sharonwhiteley6510
    @sharonwhiteley6510 5 місяців тому

    Neil Oliver should be officially recognized as the voice of common sense and truth and reason. He is our Shakespeare. May GOD bless

  • @susieflanders6045
    @susieflanders6045 5 місяців тому

    Fantastic. Thank you. Reading 'Wedlock - How Georgian Britain's Worst Husband Met His Match' by Wendy Moore (which I can highly recommend), brought me here, as James Gillray is mentioned. I've subscribed to Travels Through Time; it's so good.

  • @AndreaAkers-cb8ci
    @AndreaAkers-cb8ci 5 місяців тому

    Not really about ovid