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Showing episodes and shows of
Caroline Patey
Shows
Sinica
Chinese public opinion on the Russo-Ukrainian War, with Yawei Liu and Danielle Goldfarb
This week on Sinica, Kaiser is joined again by Yawei Liu, Senior Director for China at the Carter Center in Atlanta, Georgia; and by Danielle Goldfarb, head of global research at RIWI Corp, an innovative web-based research outfit headquartered in Toronto. They discuss a survey commissioned by the Carter Center to look at Chinese attitudes toward the Russo-Ukrainian War: whether Chinese people believe supporting Russia to be in China's interest, what they believe China's best course of action to be, and whether they're aware of — and if so, whether they believe — disinformation pushed by Moscow about U.S.-run bio labs...
2022-05-05
00 min
Sinica Podcast
Chinese public opinion on the Russo-Ukrainian War, with Yawei Liu and Danielle Goldfarb
This week on Sinica, Kaiser is joined again by Yawei Liu, Senior Director for China at the Carter Center in Atlanta, Georgia; and by Danielle Goldfarb, head of global research at RIWI Corp, an innovative web-based research outfit headquartered in Toronto. They discuss a survey commissioned by the Carter Center to look at Chinese attitudes toward the Russo-Ukrainian War: whether Chinese people believe supporting Russia to be in China's interest, what they believe China's best course of action to be, and whether they're aware of — and if so, whether they believe — disinformation pushed by Moscow about U.S.-run bio...
2022-05-05
1h 01
I Podcast di We Wealth
John M. Keynes e la libertà dell’arte e nell’arte
Nel nuovo podcast di We Wealth la professoressa Caroline Patey, consigliera culturale di Finer Finance Explorer racconta l’importanza della figura di John M. Keynes per il mondo dell’arte. Perché l’eredità del grande economista ed investitore va ben al di là della sola spesa pubblica
2019-11-19
19 min
Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters
Virginia Woolf’s French Cloak, or, To the Lighthouse previews in Paris
Caroline Patey analyses the strange anecdote of Virginia Woolf's first ever translation in French and the effect it had on her French reception. In 1926, 'Commerce' published a translation of 'Time Passes'/'Le temps passe' before the novel was even out in Great Britain and in English. Subsequent research has shown that the translator - Charles Mauron - was working on a version different from both holograph version and printed text. What is thus the status of the 'third' text? Did the choice of Commerce inflect Woolf's image in France? And above all how did Mauron's version contribute to her literary...
2016-04-05
28 min