Download Flash Player to view this content.

Ideas | Feb 28, 2013 | 54:00

The Faces of Eve

She represents the first woman on earth in Christian and Judaic traditions. In Islam she's known as Hawwa. To many, she's the thoughtless vixen who tempted man away from God. But a closer look shows a daring champion of human ingenuity and equality. Nicola Luksic explores the mystique of the woman so many claim to understand.

Now Playing on CBC Radio Help Refresh

CBC Radio One

Listen Live Ottawa change

CBC Radio 2

Listen Live Eastern change

CBC Radio 3

Listen Live Radio 3
Ideas - Opening the Book (Encore February 25, 2013)May 24, 2013 | 53:58Ideas Opening the Book (Encore February 25, 2013) Audio
Ideas Opening the Book (Encore February 25, 2013) May 24, 2013 | 53:58The book has stayed pretty much the same for over 500 years: a bunch of paper pages between covers. It's been both finite and easily grasped. But our digitally-connected world is forcing us to re-imagine what books could be.
Ideas - Dancing In the Dark: The Intelligence of Bees (Encore June 12, 2012)May 23, 2013 | 54:00Ideas Dancing In the Dark: The Intelligence of Bees (Encore June 12, 2012) Audio
Ideas Dancing In the Dark: The Intelligence of Bees (Encore June 12, 2012) May 23, 2013 | 54:00Bees are remarkable among insects. They can count, remember human faces, and communicate through dance routines performed entirely in the dark. But are they intelligent? Even creative? Bee aficionado Stephen Humphrey, along with a hive of leading bee researchers and scientists, investigates the mental lives of bees.
Ideas - The Author as FictionMay 22, 2013 | 54:00Ideas The Author as Fiction Audio
Ideas The Author as Fiction May 22, 2013 | 54:00In 1994, Dutch novelist Arnon Grunberg won the prize for best first novel in Holland. Six years later, using a different name, he won the same prize once again. He talks about various literary shenanigans with IDEAS host Paul Kennedy.
Ideas - Wachtel On The Arts - Robert CarsenMay 21, 2013 | 54:00Ideas Wachtel On The Arts - Robert Carsen Audio
Ideas Wachtel On The Arts - Robert Carsen May 21, 2013 | 54:00Eleanor Wachtel talks to Canadian opera director Robert Carsen. He talks about his early life and about his philosophy of directing, bringing fresh and surprising interpretations to classic operas.
Ideas - Beauty and the FreakMay 20, 2013 | 54:00Ideas Beauty and the Freak Audio
Ideas Beauty and the Freak May 20, 2013 | 54:00For centuries human beings have been modifying their bodies - tribal scarification, tattoos and cosmetic surgery are just a few. But when we change our bodies, do we change who we are? Sheetal Lodhia explores how changes to the body can effect changes to
Ideas - Rethinking Depression, Part 3 (Encore March 21, 2013)May 17, 2013 | 53:59Ideas Rethinking Depression, Part 3 (Encore March 21, 2013) Audio
Ideas Rethinking Depression, Part 3 (Encore March 21, 2013) May 17, 2013 | 53:59Mary O'Connell brings us the stories of the depressed on the path to wellness and the methods that can be used to get them there.
Ideas - Rethinking Depression, Part 2 (Encore March 14, 2013)May 16, 2013 | 54:00Ideas Rethinking Depression, Part 2 (Encore March 14, 2013) Audio
Ideas Rethinking Depression, Part 2 (Encore March 14, 2013) May 16, 2013 | 54:00IDEAS producer Mary O'Connell explores the short and troubling history of the antidepressant.
Ideas - Rethinking Depression, Part 1 (Encore March 7, 2013)May 15, 2013 | 54:00Ideas Rethinking Depression, Part 1 (Encore March 7, 2013) Audio
Ideas Rethinking Depression, Part 1 (Encore March 7, 2013) May 15, 2013 | 54:00Depression. It has been called the mean reds. The blue devils. The black dog. And through history, treatments for depression have varied wildly. In the Middle Ages, depressives were caged in asylums. In Victorian England, wealthier patients were sent to seaside resorts for a change of air. In the 1930’s, procedures like lobotomies and electroconvulsive therapy were used. Psychiatry’s tools were crude and limited. No wonder then, when the Age of the Antidepressant arrived, it was considered psychiatry’s triumph. Prozac came onto the market in 1988, followed quickly by many similar drugs. But, since then, the number of people afflicted with depression has soared. Mary O'Connell explores the short and troubling history of the antidepressant.
Ideas - Return to TripoliMay 14, 2013 | 54:00Ideas Return to Tripoli Audio
Ideas Return to Tripoli May 14, 2013 | 54:00Libyan novelist Hisham Matar was still a boy when his family fled to Cairo in order to escape the dictatorship of Muammar Gaddafi. He talks to IDEAS host Paul Kennedy about his recent return to a country that his imagination never left.
Ideas - Tinctor's Foul ManualMay 13, 2013 | 53:58Ideas Tinctor's Foul Manual Audio
Ideas Tinctor's Foul Manual May 13, 2013 | 53:58Our ideas about witches may come from an extraordinary manuscript found in the University of Alberta Library. It's one of only 4 known copies. Written in the 1400s and now being re-translated from medieval French, it created the framework for witch hunts.
Ideas - Legends of the Ilnu of Mashteuiatsh of QuebecMay 10, 2013 | 53:59Ideas Legends of the Ilnu of Mashteuiatsh of Quebec Audio
Ideas Legends of the Ilnu of Mashteuiatsh of Quebec May 10, 2013 | 53:59From the shores of Lac St. Jean in Northern Quebec come these ancient stories of the Mashteuiatsh Ilnu.
Ideas - Idolatry For Beginners (Encore June 20, 2012)May 9, 2013 | 54:00Ideas Idolatry For Beginners (Encore June 20, 2012) Audio
Ideas Idolatry For Beginners (Encore June 20, 2012) May 9, 2013 | 54:00At a time of widespread obsession with everything from money to celebrity to the latest in techno gadgetry, does the idea of idolatry have more than religious significance? IDEAS producer Frank Faulk explores the meaning of idolatry in a secular age.
Ideas - My Brother's - And My Sister's - Keeper, Part 2May 8, 2013 | 53:59Ideas My Brother's - And My Sister's - Keeper, Part 2 Audio
Ideas My Brother's - And My Sister's - Keeper, Part 2 May 8, 2013 | 53:59Anything you can do to make someone's life better, you must do. Right? But how much do you owe to other people, and who should you help? In this series, we consider the limits and the extent of our obligations to others, as individuals and as a society.
Ideas - Stretching The Canvas (Encore September 24, 2012)May 7, 2013 | 53:59Ideas Stretching The Canvas (Encore September 24, 2012) Audio
Ideas Stretching The Canvas (Encore September 24, 2012) May 7, 2013 | 53:59Calgary artist John Will's greatest work of art may be John Will himself. He is a trouble-maker, scamp, and rapscallion. Jim Brown takes us on a guided tour of Will's latest: the first-ever visual art show created for radio.... through the life of a bohemian extraordinaire.
Ideas - The Enright FilesMay 6, 2013 | 53:59Ideas The Enright Files Audio
Ideas The Enright Files May 6, 2013 | 53:59This month marks the 100th anniversary of Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring, and 70 years ago Aaron Copland wrote his masterwork, Appalachian Spring. Michael Enright talks to Robert Harris and to Eric Friesen about these momentous musical anniversaries

1 of 32