From UC Berkeley, a books-and-arts podcast about the cultural imagination — what Joan Didion once called the stories we tell ourselves to live. C&V delves into novels, nonfiction, poems, music, film, and other touchstones of our culture, with an eye to the spells they cast and the questions they raise. Sponsored by Berkeley's Townsend Center for the Humanities and hosted by Scott Saul, Chapter & Verse features artists, critics, historians and journalists, with a guest list that radiates outward from the ranks of the Berkeley faculty to the larger cultural community of the Bay Area and beyond.
The New York Times Magazine's Jenna Wortham -- one of the most stimulating writers on technology, media, race, sexuality, and anything else she puts h...
Hua Hsu (The New Yorker) and Jeff Chang (We Gon' Be Alright) take on a set of urgent questions: how is it that, as American culture becomes increasing...
Novelist Namwali Serpell reads from, and explores the meaning of, her short story “The Sack,” winner of the prestigious Caine Prize for African Writin...
Historian Adam Hochschild discusses Spain in Our Hearts, his mesmerizing chronicle of the Spanish Civil War and the three thousand Americans who — in ...
Mark Bittman -- a key player in 'how we eat today' -- reflects on how he became the unique writer he is: both a writer of popular cookbooks and a forc...
In this episode, Katrina Dodson reads two Clarice Lispector short stories in their entirety — the fable-like "A Chicken" and the intricate "The Smalle...
Here we discuss -- with Robert Alter, the Hebrew Bible's most esteemed translator and commentator -- the Bible at its most unorthodox: the two books t...