Guardian Books podcast: Polish literature and Russian science fiction In the final week of the Guardian's tour of Europe we send novelist James Hopkin to Poland in pursuit of its literary soul. He meets publishers and bookshop entrepreneurs in Krakow, who are taking a great literary tradition into the 21st century. We also take advice from world literature tourists on the must-read books from Poland, and discover several of the world's great poets among their recommendations.Meanwhile, with a Russian invasion of the UK imminent – or at least an invasion of authors, as Russia is crowned guest of honour at next week's London Book Fair – we visit Moscow to meet a new generation of writers who are taking up the mantle of Bulgakov, Gorky and Chekhov. We ask them what Gogol has to do with Yuri Gagarin, and why the fantasy writers of today owe so much to an eccentric 19th-century librarian.Reading listNew and Collected Poems by Wislawa Szymborska (Roundhouse)New and Collected Poems by Czesław Miłosz (Penguin Classics)Barbarian in the Garden by Zbigneiew Herbert (Atlantic)Winter Under Water by James Hopkin (Picador)The Futurological Congress by Stanislaw Lem (Harcourt)The Winter Queen by Boris Akunin (Phoenix)Dark Avenues and The Village by Ivan Bunin (Oneworld)Metro 2033 by Dmitri G (Gollancz)2017 by Olga Slavnikova (Duckworth)Claire ArmitsteadLuke HardingJames HopkinTim MabyLindesay Irvine
ヨーロッパの守護者のツアーの最終週では、その文学の魂を追求したポーランドの小説家ジェームスホプキンを送ってください
Are manned missions a waste of space? On Tuesday, the world will be awash with talk of courage and vision as it looks back on 50 years of manned space flight, a trail blazed by Yuri Gagarin's 108-minute trip around the planet.But what if the past half-century has been just a cosmic waste of money?Presidents and space agencies insist manned missions will always be at the heart of their space programmes.An astronaut not only embodies the human quest to explore, they argue. He or she can also act on tuition and think swiftly and creatively in ways impossible for a machine. それは、バックの50年の有人か過去半世紀がされている場合planet.But周辺ガガーリンの108分の旅が燃え上がった証跡を宇宙飛行に見えるように火曜日に、世界は、勇気とビジョンの話にあふれされますお金だけの宇。廃棄物?会長および宇宙機関は、と主張しミッションは常にだけでなく、探求する人間の探求を体現してその空間programmes.Anの宇宙飛行士の中心になる有人、彼らが主張している
Russia sheds light on Gagarin death Russia has declassified documents that shed light on Yuri Gagarin's mysterious death in a training flight in 1968. ロシアは1968年に訓練飛行中のガガーリンの謎の死を明らかにする文書を機密解除しています
Paul Holmes: My hero the first man to go into space This week, 50 years ago, Major Yuri Gagarin became my first and possibly only hero. Well, later on, much later, I developed a deep affection for Abraham Lincoln and to be fair for years I read everything I could about men like Group... 今週は、50年前、メジャーガガーリンは私の、おそらく最初の英雄になった
Rocket genius behind Russia's triumph Fifty years ago, Yuri Gagarin became the first man in space. Sergei Korolev built the rocket that took him. These were the face and brains of the team that beat the Americans.It remains the one untarnished triumph of Soviet science.... 50年前、ガガーリンは宇宙で最初の男になった
Human Space Flight Marks 2 Big Anniversaries On April 12, 1961, 27-year-old Yuri Gagarin blasted off in sphere-shaped Vostok 1 capsule, made one orbit around Earth 1961年4月12日で、27歳のガガーリンは、球面状のボストーク1号カプセルに打ち上げ地球の周りを1周した
Russia launches manned spacecraft (3) &$&$
The Russian Soyuz TMA-21 spacecraft, named after the first cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, carrying the International Space Station (ISS) crew of U.S. astronaut Ronald Garan and Russian cosmonauts Alexandr Samokutyaev and Andrey Borisenko, leaves a trail across sky on this long exposure picture, as it blasts off at the Baikonur cosmodrome April 5, 2011. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)&$
< ... &$&は$ロシアのソユーズTMA - 21宇宙。。u200b。。u200b船、初の宇宙飛行士ユーリガガーリンの名にちなんで名付け、国際宇宙ステーション(ISS)を米国の宇宙飛行士ロナルドガランとロシアの宇宙飛行士アレクサンドルSamokutyaevとAndrey Borisenkoの乗組員は、帳。。u200b。。u200b簿これに空を横切って歩道を離れます長時間露光の写真は、爆発から2011年4月5日バイコヌール宇宙基地でいる
Science Weekly podcast: Protecting the oceans; a space suit for dogs; and Tutankhamun goes online Jay Nelson, director of Global Ocean Legacy at the Pew Environment Group, joins us to consider how we can protect the world's oceans and whether islanders are willing to be subjected to tough restrictions. We also discuss the Chagos Archipelago, the UK's most important area of marine biodiversity.It's one small step for a mongrel ... We discover how stray dogs helped Yuri Gagarin make history. Space communications manager Kevin Yates takes us on a tour of the new Space Race exhibition at the National Space Centre in Leicester, which features a canine high-altitude suit designed by the Russians at the height of their battle with the Americans to control space. View our exclusive behind-the-scenes video of the exhibit as the suit is unpacked from its protective box and put on display. As the dust settles on the Climategate emails saga, the Guardian assembled an impressive line-up of experts to debate what the affair did - and did not - reveal about research into global warming. Listen to a small section of the 100-minute recording, or hear the debate in its entirety here. Eighty-eight years after Tutankhamun's tomb was discovered by Howard Carter, only a fraction of the 5,000 objects unearthed have been properly studied and published. Hopefully that's about to change thanks to the internet and 15 years of hard work as the excavation notes are published online. Jo Marchant went to the Griffith Institute in Oxford where the archive is now held. Follow the podcast on our Science Weekly Twitter feed and receive updates on all breaking science news stories from Guardian Science. Email scienceweeklypodcast@gmail.com. Join our Facebook group. Listen back through our archive.Subscribe free via iTunes to ensure every episode gets delivered. (Here is the non-iTunes URL feed).Alok ジェイネルソン氏は、ピュー環境グループのグローバルオーシャンLegacyのディレクター、私たちはどのようにかどうかを島民は喜んでいる世界の海を守ることができます厳しい制限を受けることを検討する結合します