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Woman's Hour

Tracey Emin, Divas, Skateboarders, Know Your Place, France drug rape

Woman's Hour

BBC

Society & Culture

4.13K Ratings

🗓️ 22 June 2023

⏱️ 58 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

As visitors walk through the doors of the newly reopened National Portrait Gallery in London, they will see 45 hand-drawn portraits of women by British artist Tracey Emin, that have been cast in bronze. They are said to represent every woman. Tracey speaks to Krupa Padhy about her creative process and what she hopes people will take away from the images.

Society sets us up to fail, according to the academic Dr Faiza Shaheen. Dr Shaheen studied at Oxford University, became a leading statistician, is standing for election as the Labour party candidate for Chingford and Woodford Green and has written a book ‘Know Your Place’. Some might describe Shaheen’s career as a personal success, evidence of working-class mobility, that anyone can do anything, but Shaheen thinks otherwise. She talks to Krupa about inequality in the UK.

Stories have emerged in the French media of a man from Provence who allegedly drugged his unsuspecting wife every night so that scores of men could rape her. We haven't independently verified the story but French newspaper Le Monde is reporting that more than 50 men have been charged. Krupa is joined by Anglo-French journalist Benedicte Paviot to tell us more.

In the final part of Woman's Hour series about women in India, Krupa looks at the rise of women skateboarders. Since its recent inclusion in the Olympic Games, skateboarding is becoming increasingly popular across the country. Atita Verghese is regarded as one of the pioneers of women’s skateboarding in India. She started skating aged 19, when she was the only woman in the skatepark. In 2015, she founded the Skate Girl India project and talks to Krupa about the events she is organising across India to empower girls.

A new exhibition at the V&A celebrates the creative power and cultural significance of the ‘diva’. With a mixture of fashion, photography, design, costume and music DIVA will celebrates the personal stories and resilience of some of the best-known divas; Marilyn Monroe, Tina Turner, Cher and Rihanna. Kate Bailey, curator of DIVA speaks to Krupa Padhy about what people can expect from the exhibition and why the concept of a diva still matters in our culture.

Presenter: Krupa Padhy Studio manager: Duncan Hannant

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

BBC Sounds Music Radio Podcasts

0:05.1

Hello I'm Crupper Party and welcome to Women's Hour from BBC Radio 4.

0:09.6

Good morning and thank you for joining us.

0:12.2

What lies behind every door is a story.

0:15.4

What about when the door is the story?

0:18.4

After three years the National Portrait Gallery in London is reopening its door today

0:24.1

and the artist behind their revamp with hand-drawn portraits of 45 women

0:28.9

is Tracy M. and I'll be speaking to her in just a moment.

0:32.4

Also when we focus on the exceptions at the top we ignore the declining conditions for those at the

0:39.2

bottom. Aligned from a new book called Know Your Place by Dr Pfizer-Shahin.

0:44.4

She'll tell us why she believes it is a lie to suggest that there are quick fixes to inequality.

0:50.7

Plus what does the term diva mean to you?

0:53.9

The Victoria and Albert Museum poses that very question

0:57.2

in a new exhibition which kicks off this week showcasing, celebrating and debating

1:02.1

divas around the world. We want to know about your diva moment on stage at a wedding in the

1:09.0

workplace wherever where you lose with self-confidence, swagger and self-importance or maybe it is a term

1:16.1

that you utterly dislike. And on the subject of self-confidence why skateboarding is on the rise

1:22.2

amongst women in India, the country's top female skateboarder will join us as well.

1:27.5

There are plenty of ways to get in touch with us. I do hope you will. You can text the program

1:32.0

that number is 84844. Text will be charged at your standard message rate. If you are one for

1:38.4

social media you'll find us on the handle at BBC Woman's Hour over on Twitter and Instagram.

1:43.8

And of course you can email us through our website or you can now send us a WhatsApp message or

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