wbur.org
support wbur today!
Listen to this show
Umberto Eco
photo

Savant, novelist, philosopher, Umberto Eco — best known as the author of the international best-seller “The Name of the Rose” — is also a public intellectual, a fount of opinion on politics and society.

His latest book, “Turning Back the Clock: Hot Wars and Media Populism,” is a collection of columns written for Italian newspapers since 2001. In it he ventures, among many other views, that history is running backwards, that “in our day, if there is to be a dictatorship, it has to be a media dictatorship and not a political one,” and that one of the characteristics of our culture is “the total Carnivalization of life.”

This hour, On Point: the great humanist Umberto Eco.

-Jack Beatty

Guest:

Umberto Eco, author of the new essay collection “Turning Back the Clock: Hot Wars and Media Populism.” Professor of semiotics at the University of Bologna in Italy, his previous books include “The Name of the Rose,” “Foucault’s Pendulum,” and “The Island of the Day Before.”

 

Tags: ,

 
 

Comments are closed.

Recent Shows
The Future of Aging
Thursday, November 5, 2009 image

A surge of new strategies to “manage” aging — from diets to testosterone. We’ll get the story.

Comments [31]
 
Climate, Congress & Copenhagen
Thursday, November 5, 2009 image

The Copenhagen climate conference is one month away. US climate action is going nowhere in Congress. We’ll look at the global implications of America’s domestic climate politics.

Comments [73]
On Point Blog
California, here we come! And we need your questions!

On Point is headed west!
No, no. Not for good. Only for one show. But it’s a very special show!  The NPR station in Thousand Oaks, California – KCLU – is celebrating their 15th anniversary. We’re lucky to have been on their airwaves for nearly seven years, and they invited us out west to host a live [...]

More » | Comments [7]
 
For Love of Science – or Money?

A new study supports the idea that U.S. dominance in engineering and science is threatened — but not for lack of training and education. It has more to do with a lack of social and economic incentives.

More » | Comments [5]
 
Matthew Hoh’s Resignation Letter

Matthew Hoh, a former Marine captain, became the first foreign service official to publicly resign in protest over the war in Afghanistan. The move has generated a lot of reaction. You can read Hoh’s resignation letter, posted by The Washington Post, which reported on it here.
It’s a topic for our news roundtable today. What [...]

More » | Comments [4]