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ARCHIVE
of past programs

April 2003

Program Notes

 

First Week (April 5 through April 11)
Exploring Fear and Irony

Aerophobia is the fear of swallowing of air. People with ostraconophobia are terrified of shellfish. Those afflicted with scriptophobia will do anything to avoid writing in public. Why are some of us terrified by the most mundane of things? Thomas Ollendick (VT) studies phobias in children and is looking for remedies for intense feelings of fear. Also featured: Shortly after 9/11, many pundits declared that irony was dead, and would no longer pervade the way we talk and think. Chidsey Dickson (CNU) discusses the role that irony plays in contemporary rhetoric.


 

Second Week (April 12 through April 18)
Re-Imagining Ireland

Twenty years ago, Ireland was largely an undeveloped and relatively poor country. Today, the Irish economy is called the Celtic Tiger, and Irish culture is being transformed like never before. Who are the Irish and where does Ireland stand in a global context? Fintan O'Toole, a journalist with the Irish Times, says that Ireland is a country forced from moment to moment to imagine itself anew. Also featured: In 2002, Ireland and eleven other EU nations began using a new currency, the euro. Desmond Dinan (GMU), a native of Ireland, is the author of Ever Closer Union, a textbook that examines the evolution of the European Union.

(Note: WCVE-FM in Richmond will air this program on Saturday, April 19)
 

Third Week (April 19 through April 25)
Grasping for Words

Literacy is defined by the U.S. government as the ability to read, write and speak in English and to compute and solve problems at levels necessary to function on the job, and in the family and society. But, more than that, it's the ability for a person to fully communicate their hopes and dreams as human beings. Literacy experts Edward Jones (GMU) and Rebecca Spurlock (GMU) explain how the mind acquires the ability to read. Also featured: Literacy coordinator Susan Erno introduces some adult learners in Central Virginia who recently showed off their newly acquired writing skills by reading out loud at a public event.


 

Fourth Week (April 26 through May 2)
Examining the Disappeared World: Jaguars and Longhouses

The jaguar is the largest cat in the Americas, but little is known about the behavior of this endangered creature. Marcella Kelly (VT) spends four months each year in the central American country of Belize studying jaguars. Using an innovative technique called camera trapping, Kelly's work is helping wildlife biologists understand how the jaguar lives in order to help preserve its habitat. Also featured: Anthropologist Peter Metcalf (UVa) spent part of the 1970s living in the longhouse communities of Borneo. Traditionally, the longhouse was the center of life for the Orang Ulu people of Borneo, but globalization and the destruction of the Indonesian rain forest have radically changed the tenor of that life.