Rebecca Solnit: The Granta Podcast Ep. 67 episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 17, 2013 · 40 MIN

Rebecca Solnit: The Granta Podcast Ep. 67

from Granta · host Rebecca Solnit

In the latest Granta podcast, Yuka Igarashi speaks to writer, journalist and activist Rebecca Solnit. Solnit is the author of numerous books about art, landscape, ecology and politics. They include A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities that Arise in Disaster; A Field Guide to Getting Lost; Wanderlust: A History of Walking; Infinite City, a book of 22 maps with nearly 30 collaborators; and, most recently The Faraway Nearby, published this June. Solnit discusses how her new book interweaves personal narratives about family and illness with stories about Mary Shelley and Che Guevara. We also talk about her interest in paradoxes and her momentary connection to Beyonce.

In the latest Granta podcast, Yuka Igarashi speaks to writer, journalist and activist Rebecca Solnit. Solnit is the author of numerous books about art, landscape, ecology and politics. They include A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities that Arise in Disaster; A Field Guide to Getting Lost; Wanderlust: A History of Walking; Infinite City, a book of 22 maps with nearly 30 collaborators; and, most recently The Faraway Nearby, published this June. Solnit discusses how her new bo...

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Rebecca Solnit: The Granta Podcast Ep. 67

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Cacería

May 9, 2015 ·12m

Extending the GBN to Hinxton Genome Campus Explaining the 'drill and stitch' method used to rapidly extend the Granta Backbone Network out to Babraham in order to facilitate greater collaboration with the Hinxton Genome Campus. January 2019. GBN Cambridge University Granta Backbone Network En voz de Antonio Ortuño UNAM Antonio Ortuño (Zapopan, Jalisco, 1976). Periodista y escritor. Colabora en distintos diarios nacionales e internacionales como Milenio (México), El País (España) y Clarín (Argentina) y en revistas como Letras Libres, Proceso y La Tempestad. Es autor de las novelas ‘El buscador de cabezas’ (2006), ‘Recursos humanos’ (2007) y ‘Ánima’ (2011) y sus cuentos se encuentran en los títulos ‘El jardín japonés’ (2006) y ‘La señora Rojo’ (2010). Por su obra, en 2007 fue reconocido como finalista al Premio Herralde de Novela y en 2010 la revista Granta lo eligió como uno de los mejores escritores jóvenes de Iberoamérica. “Cacería”, texto que se reproduce a continuación, pertenece a la novela ‘La fila india’ (Océano, 2013). Este fragmento describe una situación protagonizada por migrantes que esperan ser atendidos por un Delegado de la Comisión Nacional de Migración, persona que influirá definitivamente en su destino. La novela en su conjunto retrata la realidad de aquellos centroamericanos Uki Goñi - Observations Uki Goñi I write for The Guardian, The New York Review of Books, The New York Times and others. Best known for my book "The Real Odessa: How Nazi War Criminals Escaped Europe", Granta Books, augmented edition November 2022. "Observations" is an informal meeting place for lectures, interviews, anything of interest that comes my way. Enjoy!

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In the latest Granta podcast, Yuka Igarashi speaks to writer, journalist and activist Rebecca Solnit. Solnit is the author of numerous books about art, landscape, ecology and politics. They include A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary...

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