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This episode of The Conversation’s In Depth Out Loud podcast , features the work of David Vincent, historian at the Open University. He has spent the last few years looking into how people in the past managed to balance...
Lockdown lessons from the history of solitude is an episode from In Depth, Out Loud by The Conversation. This episode of The Conversation’s In Depth Out Loud podcast , features the work of David Vincent, historian at the Open University. He...
This episode belongs to In Depth, Out Loud.
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Published May 20, 2020, 23:16 long, audio available.
This episode of The Conversation’s In Depth Out Loud podcast , features the work of David Vincent, historian at the Open University. He has spent the last few years looking into how people in the past managed to balance community ties and solitary behaviours. With the coronavirus crisis forcing many to self-isolate and limiting our sociability, this has never seemed more relevant. Solitude used to be restricted to enclosed religious orders and was thus a privileged experience of a male elite. It was treated with a mixture of fear and respect. Change was only set in motion by the Reformation and the Enlightenment, when new ideologies took hold and solitude slowly became something that anyone could acceptably seek from time to time. Most people in the West are now used to some regular form of solitude – but the reality of lockdown is making this experience far more extreme. The history of solitude has lessons for us in differentiating between being alone and feeling lonely. Similarly, it offers lessons for navigating the fragile boundary between life-enhancing and soul-destroying forms of solitary behaviour. You can read the text version of this in depth article here. This audio version is read and produced by Annabel Bligh. This story came out of a project at The Conversation called Insights . Sponsored by Research England, our Insights team generate in depth articles derived from interdisciplinary research. You can read their stories here , or
You can listen to Lockdown lessons from the history of solitude online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Lockdown lessons from the history of solitude is an episode from In Depth, Out Loud by The Conversation.
This episode is 23:16 long.
This episode was published on May 20, 2020.
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You can listen to Lockdown lessons from the history of solitude on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.
Lockdown lessons from the history of solitude is from In Depth, Out Loud by The Conversation.
Published May 20, 2020 and 23:16 long