American Medieval with Matthew Gabriel
Although our guest doesn’t still skateboard (much), he does have a great new book on the history of a gesture - to turn away from grief/ shame. What does it mean to bear witness in the medieval and modern worlds?
The Gist with Mike Pesca
University of Chicago professor Benjamin A. Saltzman joins the show to discuss his book, Turning Away: The Poetics of an Ancient Gesture. He explores the artistic and emotional history of averting our gaze—and why looking away often signals profound engagement rather than indifference.
Townsend Center Book Chat
Turning Away: A Poetics of an Ancient Gesture in conversation with Professor Martin Jay at UC Berkeley
Hermitix Podcast
Turning Away from the World / The Poetics of an Ancient Gesture on Hermitix, a podcast focusing on one-on-one interviews relating to fringe philosophy, obscure theory, weird lit, under-appreciated thinkers and movements.
The Last Show with David Cooper
The Profound Gesture of Turning Away
Seize the Moment
On episode 252, we welcome Benjamin Saltzman to discuss the gesture of turning away, the shame and grief behind it, how it became a moral topic, turning away in art and Timanthes’s lost painting of Agamemnon, Plato’s tripartite concept of the soul and turning away as a mark of confusion, rigidity and steadfastness as signs of courage and character, cognitive flexibility and knowing when to turn away, Hannah Arendt and misinterpreting averted gazes as the foundation of totalitarianism, and understanding aversion without its moral trappings.