Visualising War and Peace

A podcast by The University of St Andrews - Wednesdays

Wednesdays

Categories:

83 Episodes

  1. Narrative Transformation: storytelling for peace

    Published: 09/10/2024
  2. Between war and peace: military involvement in peacebuilding

    Published: 24/04/2024
  3. Peace and Politics with Lord Jim Wallace

    Published: 27/03/2024
  4. Children, Childhoods and Child-Soldiering: critical lenses on war

    Published: 21/02/2024
  5. Transitional place-making: Palestinian refugee experiences in Lebanon

    Published: 14/02/2024
  6. AI-enabled military technologies: technology, ethics, trust, storytelling

    Published: 31/01/2024
  7. Visualising action: pre-battle speeches in ancient Judaism

    Published: 24/01/2024
  8. Conflict and Identity in ancient Judaism

    Published: 17/01/2024
  9. Visualising a Sustainable Future through Gaming with Mark Wong

    Published: 08/01/2024
  10. Peace activism in Israel and Palestine

    Published: 19/12/2023
  11. Visualising peace and conflict with J.R.R. Tolkien

    Published: 17/12/2023
  12. Principled Impartiality and Accompaniment in Peacebuilding

    Published: 11/12/2023
  13. War-to-Peace transitions with Jaremey McMullin

    Published: 29/11/2023
  14. Visualising the Thirty Years' War with Steve Murdoch

    Published: 01/11/2023
  15. Peace and post-trauma recovery in Northern Ireland

    Published: 02/08/2023
  16. Peace and Conflict in Jivana Yoga

    Published: 12/07/2023
  17. Taking love and care seriously in peace and conflict studies

    Published: 03/05/2023
  18. A short tour of our virtual Museum of Peace

    Published: 19/04/2023
  19. Images at war: conflict, peace and photography and Sri Lanka

    Published: 05/04/2023
  20. Migration, Mobility and Place with Elena Isayev

    Published: 29/03/2023

1 / 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.