Episode 4
Philosopher Will Buckingham explores the history of our complex relationship with strangers. Today: on being a guest, the significance of feasting and strangers meet in Helsinki.
When Will Buckingham's partner died, he coped with his grief by throwing his doors open to new people, and travelling alone to far-flung places among strangers. 'Strangers are unentangled in our worlds and lives,' he writes, 'and this lack can lighten our own burdens.' Starting from that experience of personal grief, he draws on his knowledge as a philosopher and anthropologist, as well as a keen and wide-roaming traveller, to explore the tensions, anxieties, joys and rewards of our relationship with strangers. Taking in stories of loneliness, exile, travel and hospitality from early history, classical Greece and Rome to the present day, he holds out the possibility of an antidote to the fears and isolation of an increasingly fragmented world.
Reader: Mark Jeary-Fairbairn
Abridged and produced by Sara Davies
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Broadcasts
- Thu 19 Aug 2021 09:45Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4 FM
- Fri 20 Aug 2021 00:30Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4