Episodes

  • The Digital Dilemma | with Noortje Hoevens
    Mar 4 2025

    What will a peak behind the governments’ screens show us? What do we need to know about digital governments? And how does digitalization change public values?

    Digitalization is not just technical – this is the key message of this week’s episode, in which Jara learns about the world of digital governments. Together with her guest Noortje Hoevens, she discusses the political and social aspects of digitalization and investigates how digitalization causes a shift in values – from intrinsic to IT values.

    Noortje is a PhD candidate at Radboud University. She investigates the relationship between digitalization and public values in Dutch public agencies.

    Do you want to learn more about the pitfalls of digitalization? Then, follow Noortje’s advice and watch the documentary “The Social Dilemma.”


    Edit: Jara Majerus

    Cover: Antonia Leise

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    19 mins
  • The Ruins of 9/11 | with László Munteán
    Feb 18 2025

    What are the things we don’t remember when we remember 9/11? Why is commemorating 9/11 still a heatedly discussed topic, even more than 20 years later? And where did theruins of the Twin Towers actually go?

    “Where were you when the planes hit the towers?” Is probably one of the most asked questions of the 21st century. In this week’s episode, Antonia takes a closer look at the aftermath of the terrorist attack. Together with guest László Munteán, she discusses mourning the dead after the attacks, how a significant amount of the towers’ steel ended up in China – and what three ships have to do with all of that.

    László Munteán is an assistant professor at the Faculty of Arts. His research focusses on the emorialization – and especially materiality – of 9/11. He is the coordinator of the RICH research group Memory, Materiality and Affect.

    Would you like to start learning more about the material culture surrounding the terrorist attacks? Then follow László’s suggestion and read Jay D. Aronson’s book Who Owns the Dead? The Science and Politics of Death at Ground Zero.


    Edit: Jara Majerus

    Cover: Antonia Leise

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    25 mins
  • Powerful Prejudices | with Gijs Bijlstra
    Feb 4 2025

    Why do we have prejudices? How are they created? And how do prejudices influence how we see and interact with people around us?

    In this new episode of In a Nutshell, Jara learns that stereotypes are not only bad. With her guest, Gijs Bijlstra, she embarks on a journey to understand the power of prejudices, what we can use them for, and when we need to overcome them.

    Gijs is an Associate Professor and social psychologist. He works at the Behavioural Science Institute. Gijs is interested in how stereotypes and prejudice influence our perceptions and behaviors.

    Do you want to know more about prejudices and their influence on our perceptions? Follow Gijs’ tips and check out the podcast “Opinion Science” by Andy Luttrell. You can also read the book “Blindspot” by Mahzarin R. Banaji and Anthony G. Greenwald and watch the movie “Green Book."

    If you like what we do with this podcast, follow us on Instagram @inanutshell.podcast.


    Edit: Jara Majerus

    Cover: Antonia Leise

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    24 mins
  • The Psychology of Sex | with Maerten Prins
    Jan 21 2025

    Sex should be about having fun and pornography usually gets it wrong – at least according to Maerten Prins, long-time lecturer of the popular course Psychology of Sexuality.

    In today’s episode of In a Nutshell, Antonia and Maerten talk about why the Netherlands might have the best sex education in the world but still falls short for many students. But what makes for good sex – and good sex education – in the first place? How has the way we talk about sex changed over the last decades? And why should we all masturbate more?

    Maerten Prins is a cultural psychologist and lecturer in the Psychology department. His course Psychology of Sexuality is attended by more than 700 students every year and covers everything from coitus to consent, including Maerten’s favourite topic: pornography, which encompasses a whole range of things that need to be talked about when talking about sex.

    To learn more about sex, follow Maerten’s tips and have a look at Justin Lehmiller’s book The Psychology of Human Sexuality, Lehmiller’s website and his Sex and Psychology Podcast. For Dutch readers, Maerten recommends the books De waarheid over seks: plezier en gendergelijkheid op planeet Aarde by Laan and van Lunsen and Seks!: een leven lang leren by van Lunsen en Laan. And for English readers, Emily Nagoski’s book Come As You Are.


    Edit: Jara Majerus

    Cover: Antonia Leise

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    22 mins
  • Colonialism on the Ball Field | with Jan Bant
    Jan 7 2025

    How can sports be inclusive and exclusive at the same time? What can baseball tell us about Dutch colonialism? And how can sports be a means of identification?

    In the first episode of 2025, Jara investigates the intersection of baseball and politics. Together with her guest Jan Bant, she explores notions of identity, belonging, and exclusion by taking a close look at what happens on the ball field.

    Jan is a PhD candidate at the Department of History, Art History and Classics. He is interested in the past and present of colonialism, the Caribbean, and Transatlantic relations. For his PhD, he analyses baseball's role in Caribbean communities in the Netherlands and the Caribbean communities since 1950.

    Do you want to know more about how baseball can teach us about colonialism, belonging and identity? Follow Jan’s tips and watch the documentary series "Homerun Curaçao" and the documentary "Boys of Summer". Or read "Honkbalgoud" by Maarten Kolsloot and Wesley Meijer.

    Edit: Jara Majerus

    Cover: Antonia Leise

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    22 mins
  • The Science behind Music Reviews | with Alex van der Hulst
    Dec 17 2024

    How prominent is the male gaze in music reviews? Why are there no guilty pleasure songs? And how authentic can artists in an industry like the music industry really be?

    In this episode, Antonia delves into the world of music, more specifically, music reviews. Together with her guest, Alex van der Hulst, she explores the shift from rockism to popism, asks whether we can separate artists from their art, and remembers iconic and extremely inauthentic pop groups (yes, it’s Milli Vanilli and Boney M.).

    Alex van der Hulst is a PhD candidate at the Faculty of Arts, where he researches popular music. His research focuses on how music reviews have shaped popular music and how they were shaped by it. Next to doing research, Alex also works as a journalist and is a writer of music reviews himself.

    If you want to know more about music reviews and popular music, make sure to follow Alex’s suggestion and read or watch High Fidelity.

    Edit: Jara Majerus

    Cover: Antonia Leise

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    23 mins
  • Nature's Call for Change | with Marjolein Oele
    Dec 3 2024

    Do we need to treat nature differently? How can philosophy help us do so? And what makes documentaries about cats a good starting point?

    In this week’s episode, Jara explores nature. More specifically, she investigates how humans relate to nature, why we like to see ourselves as separate from it, and why we treat nature the way we do. As always, she does so with an expert guest. For this episode, Marjolein Oele joins the podcast to offer insights and explanations on why humans and nature might not be so different after all.

    Marjolein is a professor in the Humanities at the Faculty of Arts and the Faculty of Philosophy, Theology, and Religion at Radboud University. One of her many interests is environmental philosophy, which examines the natural environment and the place humans occupy within it.

    If you want to follow this train of thought and explore the human-nature relationship further, take Marjolein’s advice and watch the documentary Inside the Mind of a Cat.

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    24 mins
  • A Different History of Drugs | with Brigitte Adriaensen
    Nov 19 2024

    Poison, medicine or magic potion? Drugs can probably be all of that. But what makes a drug legal or illegal? Or rather: who decides on that?

    “Who will ever relate the whole history of narcotics? It is almost the history of ‘culture’,” wrote Friedrich Nietzsche more than a hundred years ago – and he might be onto something. In today’s episode, Antonia and this week’s guest, Brigitte Adriaensen, talk about how drugs have been perceived throughout time and why colonialism wasn’t only built on the drug trade but continues to influence how we view substances like cocaine.

    Brigitte Adriaensen is a professor of Hispanic Literature and Culture. For her VICI project ‘Poison, Medicine or Magic Potion’, she and her team research the perception of peyote, ayahuasca and coca across time.

    Would you like to learn more about the history of drugs? Then follow Brigitte’s recommendations and watch the movie Embrace of the Serpent (2015), visit the website Microcosms: A Homage to Sacred Plants of the Americas or read the book One River by Canadian anthropologist Wade Davis.

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    21 mins