BBC Darwin Season

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The BBC Darwin Season is a series of television and radio programmes commissioned by the

CBBC.[1]

Highlights

Radio

Events in the Darwin season are broadcast on the broadcaster's flagship voice programming channel, Radio 4 and its arts and culture channel, Radio 3.

Radio 4
  • Melvyn Bragg presents Darwin: In Our Time, a four-part documentary series examining "Darwin's writing remains such a profound influence on our understanding of the natural world."
  • In Dear Darwin, five eminent contemporary thinkers present spoken letters to Charles Darwin "expressing their thoughts on his legacy.[3]
  • Maritime historian Robert Prescott seeks the final resting place of Darwin's ship in Hunting The Beagle[4]
  • Poet and journalist Ruth Padel, a descendant of Charles Darwin, "[explores] the ideas and emotions which shaped Darwin" in a four-part series, Darwin: My Ancestor[5]
Radio 3

Darwin is also the subject of special editions of the programmes

Night Waves and Words and Music.[6]

Television

  • On BBC One:
  • On BBC Two:
    • Darwin's Dangerous Idea a three-part series presented by Andrew Marr showing how the theory of evolution has influenced politics and society in the last 150 years.
    • Jimmy Doherty in Darwin's Garden, a three-part series based in which the presenter recreates some of Darwin's experiments at Down House.
    • Did Darwin Kill God?, in which philosopher and theologian Conor Cunningham of Nottingham University discusses the history of Christian attitudes to Biblical literalism, arguing that it is legitimate to accept Darwin's theory of evolution and believe in God.
  • On BBC Four:
    • Armand Leroi
      .
    • Darwin's Struggle: The Evolution Of The Origin Of Species, a 60-minute documentary featuring biographers and scientists examining, through Darwin's own private writings, the internal struggle which Darwin went through during the twenty years he took to develop his ideas into a revolutionary book.

References

External links