Page de couverture de More Jam Tomorrow

More Jam Tomorrow

More Jam Tomorrow

Auteur(s): Ros Taylor
Écouter gratuitement

À propos de cet audio

From teeth to Trident — post-war British history as you've never heard it before. In each episode, Ros Taylor delves into the truth about how our lives changed after World War Two — and what it means for politics now. Now independent, this is the sequel to the hit "Jam Tomorrow" podcast.©️ 2025 More Jam Tomorrow Monde Sciences sociales
Épisodes
  • Women's Trousers
    Dec 18 2025

    "Ask a man whether women should wear slacks and the answer is almost certain to be a firm 'No.'" How did women get to wear the trousers? Ros Taylor talks to fashion expert Belinda Naylor and Purna Sen, who wore trousers to her sixth form in 1978 – and was thrown out.

    Belinda Naylor is a producer with an MA in fashion curation. Her Instagram, where you can find some of her favourite women in trousers, is @fashion_chatter.

    Purna Sen is the former head of human rights at the Commonwealth Secretariat and a visiting professor at London Metropolitan University.

    The extract from the Manchester Guardian in 1952 is voiced by Seth Thévoz.

    The clip from The Seven Year Itch starring Marilyn Monroe is available on YouTube.

    Man Alive: The Office Christmas Party (1970) is also on YouTube.

    In 2002 the Guardian explained why schools could still choose whether to impose skirts. I also drew on Amy Gower's doctoral thesis, Schoolgirls, identity and agency in England: 1970-2004, University of Reading, 2021.

    Lego has pictures of its early minifigures.

    Voir plus Voir moins
    22 min
  • Malaya
    Dec 4 2025

    In 1948 Britain declared an Emergency in Malaya

    It wasn't really an emergency. It was a guerrilla war.

    And Britain would spend 12 years trying to drive communists out of its territory. What were we doing there?

    Ros Taylor talks to Open University history professor Karl Hack and Economist bureau chief Dominic Ziegler about what the UK did in Malaya, and why Singapore cultivates positive memories of British occupation.

    The Imperial War Museum's exhibition Emergency Exits: The Fight for Independence in Malaya, Kenya and Cyprus is on until 26 March.

    Karl Hack is Professor of Asian and Imperial History at the Open University. He is the author of The Malayan Emergency: Revolution and counterinsurgency at the end of empire (Cambridge University Press).

    Dominic Ziegler is the Singapore bureau chief at The Economist. Faris Joraimi's writing is here.

    Footage of Australian soldiers in Malaya comes from a public relations film at the Australian War Memorial YouTube channel.

    Lee Kuan Yew's 1989 speech on immigration is on YouTube.

    Seth Thévoz voiced James Griffiths, secretary for the colonies, Anthony Eden (both in 1951) and Ernest Popplewell, the MP for Newcastle-upon-Tyne, in 1952. All three speeches are in Hansard.

    Singapore's Heritage Trail tells the story of the second world war there. Freedom House publishes an annual report on Singapore. The British Army Review ran a special edition on the Malayan Emergency in 2018.

    Voir plus Voir moins
    40 min
  • RP
    Nov 20 2025

    'Oh, bugger orf!' We all know Received Pronunciation when we hear it. But what makes this accent distinctive? Why do people still pay to learn how to speak RP – and does it really bring the advantages it used to?

    Ros Taylor talks to voice coach and actor Alix Dunmore and Professor of Phonetics Jane Setter about how to spot an RP speaker – and how the accent has changed over the past century.

    Speeches by Lord Brabazon of Tara and Lord Wedgwood are taken from a Lords debate in 1943 and are voiced by historian Seth Thévoz.

    Alix Dunmore runs Alix Dunmore Accent Coaching.

    Jane Setter is Professor of Phonetics at the University of Reading. She is the author of Your Voice Speaks Volumes: It's not what you say but how you say it, the Cambridge Handbook of Phonetics and the Oxford Handbook of Language and Prejudice, as well as co-editor of the Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary.

    Queen Elizabeth II's 1957 Christmas speech is available at the Royal Family YouTube channel. Prince William' interview is here. 1943 BBC Archive audio is on Facebook, as is Daniel Craig reverting to Scouse. The BBC has investigated how Queen Elizabeth's accent changed during her reign. Stephen Fry, an RP speaker, hosted an entertaining episode of Fry's English Delight about spoken English.

    Voir plus Voir moins
    32 min
Pas encore de commentaire