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Unseen Academicals: A Discworld and Terry Pratchett Podcast

Unseen Academicals: A Discworld and Terry Pratchett Podcast

Auteur(s): Joshua Bulleid
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An intermittent examination of Terry Pratchett's Discworld book series from an academic perspective, hosted by Joshua Bulleid. Contact: unseenacademicalspod@gmail.com Support: patreon.com/unseenacademicalsJoshua Bulleid Art
Épisodes
  • 15B - Small Gods, Part 2 - Books and New Sons
    Sep 17 2024

    The second episode examining Terry Pratchett's 1992's Discworld novel, Small Gods, examining the role of books and memory in fantasy fiction, comparisons to Gene Wolfe's Book of the New Sun sequence, contemplations of genre and what it means to be a "comedy", and seriously considering whether I even want to do the show anymore.

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    1 h et 51 min
  • 15A - Small Gods, Part 1: Consider the Tortoise
    May 26 2024

    The first episode on Terry Pratchett's thirteenth (and best) Discworld novel Small Gods (1992), looking at religious and folkloric depictions of tortoises, the idea that gods need belief to survive as a trope of fantasy literature through influential works like those of Fritz Leiber and the Epic of Gilgamesh, as well as the early Dungeons and Dragons handbooks, the use of explicitly religious language in fantasy, comparisons to Philip Pulman's His Dark Materials series and, finally, an examination of religious animal ethics.

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    2 h et 17 min
  • 14C – Pyramids, Part 2b: Egyptian Representations
    Apr 4 2024

    The third and final episode tangentially related to Terry Pratchett's 1989 Discworld novel Pyramids, providing a crash course in Egyptian fantasy and science fiction—as in written by Egyptians, rather than simply about them. We go all the way back to the beginning, talking about traditional fantasy precursors and the origins of the modern Egyptian science fiction tradition, talking about its development throughout the later part of the twentieth century and providing some (overly) close analysis of Mustafā Mahmūd's The Spider (1965) and Nihād Sharīf's The Conqueror of Time (1972), before jumping forward to the allegedly more "authentic" post-2011 Egyptian Revolution era and the currently available English translations by Ahmed Khaled Tawfik, Mohammad Rabie and Ahmed Naji, among others.


    Contact: unseenacademicalspod@gmail.com



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    1 h et 45 min
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I just stumbled upon this podcast and am SO happy! also very happy that it's far enough along so that I can binge it 😁🙃
I can't believe the only other rating it has is 1 star, and is so rude & unappreciative! So easy to heckle from the sidelines instead of creating your own unique contribution to the human race and putting it out there. Shame on you!
In any case, I am so grateful for the time, effort and love that Josh poured into each episode - it really is a labour of love. I love hearing about all the back ground and nuance that Pratchett wove into his massive opus, and gleaning new levels of understanding beyond what I have picked up through my 10+ readings of the Disc World. LOVE the podcast, and will now be re-listening to it, too! thank you, Josh! 🙏🏻🤍😌🙇🏻‍♀️

So Grateful!

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Two literary students somehow fail to miss the major points of Unseen Academicals in favour of debates about Tolkien religious views. in a Pratchett podcast. I would say this was a waste of their time, but given their degrees they probably already know.

Disappointing

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