Seriously interesting documentaries from Radio 4.
Alan Dein takes a breakneck tour through the history of the public information film.
The artist asks why collections from Oceania, the Americas and Africa are hidden from view
The courageous journey of refugee Yusra Mardini, from war-torn Syria to the Rio Olympics.
Former Lehman Brothers banker Henry Dodds explores our relationship with money.
The changing accents on the UK's longest rail journey, the 0820 from Aberdeen to Penzance.
How do Sunni-Shia couples handle the deepening gulf between their two sects of Islam?
An immersive river journey through the city of Sheffield and its industrial past.
An apple, a car, even a super yacht... Why are so many things called Jazz?
Jane Garvey reflects on women and cars with presenter Suzi Perry and driver Susie Wolff.
Kevin Fong boldly goes in search of Star Trek's 50-year-old vision of the future.
Simon Read explores the psychological impact on people who fall victim to fraudsters.
Viv Groskop explores Gustave Courbet's notorious and explicit painting.
Financial guru Alvin Hall returns to his Florida hometown.
Psychotherapist Philippa Perry investigates when and why children lie.
Time to re-think the mid-life crisis? Stephen Smith explores....
Seventy years ago, an article about the atomic bombing of Hiroshima rocked the world.
How did a sideshow doctor change the course of medical history?
David Wilson talks to former bank robber Noel 'Razor' Smith about his life in crime.
Vivienne Parry asks if the NHS can deliver the benefits of genomic medicine for all.
Maya Amin-Smith explores the legacy of the Grunwick dispute, four decades after it began.
Marie-Louise Muir explores the tradition of keening for the dead in Ireland.
What did the Birmingham Six case alter - could such miscarriages of justice happen today?
Animal wisdom, mothers and sons. What do killer whales tell us about the human menopause?
Nihal Arthanayake presents a portrait of contemporary Britain in an epoch of terror.