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Peer-to-peer networking: David Willetts and Jennie Bristow in the latest Books podcast

Books editor Karen Shook introduces our latest literary podcast

Published on
July 31, 2015
Last updated
September 11, 2015
Pile of books on grass, summertime

Canterbury Christ Church University sociologist Jennie Bristow鈥檚聽 was covered in our books pages a few weeks ago.

The peer reviewer I chose for the job of assessing her monograph is an early career scholar known for his own book on the subject 鈥 and, admittedly, even better known for his previous day job. David Willetts, formerly minister for universities and science, is now a visiting professor affiliated with the Policy Institute at King鈥檚 College London.

As Professor Willetts鈥 critically acclaimed and agenda-setting 2010 book The Pinch: How The Baby Boomers Took Their Children鈥檚 Future 鈥撀燗nd Why They Should Give it Back was one of the works Dr Bristow focused on in her wide-ranging study, and as his review praised her book鈥檚 insights into the work of Karl Mannheim but took issue with its 鈥減ostmodern鈥 focus on the 鈥渃ultural script鈥 forming around 鈥渢he baby boomer problem鈥, I thought it would be interesting to introduce academic author to peer reviewer in the confines of our podcast studio, and invite them to discuss 鈥撀爋r slug it out.

So, for 45 minutes, you鈥檒l hear me refereeing as two scholars 鈥撀爋ne a baby boomer and the other a Generation X-er, in case you wondered 鈥撀爓ho are both fascinated by generational and demographic change and its social, economic and political impact, debate the issues.

They talk about each others鈥 books, Mannheim, Havant constituents鈥 Nimby tendencies, whether top-down media positioning of the baby boomer generation as a 鈥淏oomergeddon鈥 is merely a cover for the realities of sharply rising inequality, why The Pinch wasn鈥檛 called We Need to Talk About Pensions, what books both scholars are working on next, and just how much Professor Willetts enjoyed getting his very first round of peer review at King鈥檚.

karen.shook@tesglobal.com

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