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Desert Island Discs

Margaret MacMillan, historian

Desert Island Discs

BBC

Society & Culture, Music Commentary, Music, Personal Journals

4.413.7K Ratings

🗓️ 24 February 2019

⏱️ 39 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Professor Margaret MacMillan is a Canadian historian, author and broadcaster. In 2018 she delivered the Reith Lectures on BBC Radio 4, in which she examined the tangled history of war and society. She was born in Toronto in 1943, and her interest in history was kindled by the stories her parents told about when they were young and by the historical adventure novels she read as a child. After a long academic career in Canada, she found herself in the international spotlight in her late 50s. Her book Peacemakers, about the 1919 Paris Peace Conference, won the BBC Samuel Johnson Prize and many other awards, and became a best-seller. Margaret is the great-granddaughter of David Lloyd George, who attended the Paris Conference as the British Prime Minister. She has also written books about Nixon and Mao, about Europe’s path to World War One, and about personalities who have shaped history. She became the Warden of St Antony’s College, Oxford, in 2007, and retired from the role in 2017. In the 2018 Queen’s New Year’s Honours List, Professor MacMillan was appointed a Companion of Honour. She continues to research and write. BOOK CHOICE: À la Recherche du Temps Perdu by Proust LUXURY: A machine to help her learn to sing CASTAWAY'S FAVOURITE: Mood Indigo by Duke Ellington Presenter: Lauren Laverne Producer: Sarah Taylor

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

BBC Sounds Music Radio Podcasts

0:04.9

Hello, I'm Lauren LeVern and this is the Desert Island Disks Podcast.

0:08.6

Every week I ask my guests to choose the 8 tracks, book and luxury they'd want to take

0:13.3

with them if they were cast away to a desert island.

0:16.8

And for right reasons, the music is shorter than the original broadcast.

0:21.2

I hope you enjoy listening.

0:30.0

Music Music

0:36.0

Music Music

0:44.0

My cast away this week is the historian Professor Margaret McMillan.

0:47.8

She's known for her perceptive analysis of events and for her ability to assess the way

0:52.2

they are shaped both by the historical forces of the time and by the individuals who participate

0:58.0

in them.

0:59.3

As for her own history, it might have been a childhood spent in Canada, hearing stories

1:03.5

about family connections all over the British Empire that first kindled her interest in

1:07.8

her chosen subject.

1:08.8

It's equally possible that playing with a First World War hand grenade, a souvenir of her

1:13.5

grandfathers, put her on the path to becoming a military historian.

1:17.8

She spent 25 years as a teacher before she wrote her first book and it was her second published

1:22.8

in 2001 that would be her breakthrough.

1:26.0

Her account of the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 became a best seller and she became

1:31.0

the first woman to win the Samuel Johnson Prize for nonfiction.

1:35.1

Decorated many times over, both in the UK and Canada, in the past year alone, she's

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