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Port Cities and Maritime Cultures

Port Cities and Maritime Cultures

Released: 2025-02-14
© Guy Collender
Port Cities and Maritime Cultures - QR Code
5 Episodes
Audio
Listen on Apple Podcasts
5 Episodes
Audio
Listen on Apple Podcasts
Released: 2025-02-14
© Guy Collender
Most Recent Episode
The Devil's Highway:  The myths and realities of life in London's sailortown

The Devil's Highway: The myths and realities of life in London's sailortown

Interview with Professor Brad Beaven about his new book
Time: 11:31
Ratcliffe Highway - the heart of London's sailortown - had a notorious reputation for knife crime and immorality in the nineteenth century. In this episode, Brad Beaven, Professor of Social and Cultural History at the University of Portsmouth, shares research from his new book about this cosmopolitan and waterfront district. He explains the myths and realities of life in an 'international contact zone', the impact of the sensationalist press, and the role of women in managing sailortown institutions, including boarding houses and pubs. His book, published by Manchester University Press, is called The Devil's Highway: Urban Anxieties and Subaltern Cultures in London's Sailortown, c. 1850-1900. 
Professor Beaven also speaks about work underway at the Centre for Port Cities and Maritime Cultures, which he co-directs, at the University of Portsmouth. He refers to the distinctiveness and importance of urban-maritime research, and the value of co-producing knowledge, especially with partners in the global south as part of the Sail to Steam, Carbon to Green project funded by Lloyd's Register Foundation.
The podcast is presented and produced by Dr Guy Collender, of the Centre for Port Cities and Maritime Cultures at the University of Portsmouth.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Episode ID: 1000692192326
GUID: 67af0e7af7ed892410743e48
Release Date: 14/02/2025, 15:05:55

Description

Port Cities and Maritime Cultures - a new podcast from the University of Portsmouth - focuses on the past, present and future importance of the waterfront and coastal communities. Too often such places and their peoples have been forgotten and marginalised. In each 30-minute episode, Dr Guy Collender interviews researchers to find out about the peoples, cultures, cargoes and ships found at sea, in port, and along the coast. The podcast is produced by the Centre for Port Cities and Maritime Cultures at the University of Portsmouth. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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