PostHole
Compose Login
You are browsing eu.zone1 in read-only mode. Log in to participate.
rss-bridge 2020-07-13T19:32:00+00:00

Bed

After a long journey, there’s nothing nicer for Katy than climbing into her own bed. It’s often the first major purchase we make when we grow up and leave home.

Its significance was not lost on our ancestors. The bed was often the place where societal attitudes to sleep, superstition, sex, and status were played out, sometimes in dramatic form.

So where did the bed come from, and what can this everyday object tell us about ourselves?

A sleeper in early modern times believed that sleep was akin to death, with the devil waiting to pounce after darkness. So bed-time rituals were performed at the bedside and wolves’ teeth were often hung around the sleeper’s neck. Iron daggers were dangled over the cradles of infants at night to prevent them from being changed into demon babies.

While we may have outgrown a fear of the devil, sleep expert and neuroscientist Prof Russell Foster fears the modern-day obsession that’s disrupting our sleep – our mobile devices. His advice? Prepare your bed for a good night’s sleep and defend it with a passion.

Also featuring resident public historian Greg Jenner, and Prof Sasha Handley, expert on Early Modern History and sleep during this time.

Producer: Beth Eastwood.

Picture: Bed, Credit: Igor Vershinsky/Getty Images


Homepage

Accessibility links

BBC World Service

Discovery

Main content

Listen now

Bed

Discovery The Origin of Stuff

Episode 6 of 6

Katy Brand reveals how the bed, past and present, has been shaped by our attitudes to sleep, sex, and status.

After a long journey, there’s nothing nicer for Katy than climbing into her own bed. It’s often the first major purchase we make when we grow up and leave home.

Its significance was not lost on our ancestors. The bed was often the place where societal attitudes to sleep, superstition, sex, and status were played out, sometimes in dramatic form.

So where did the bed come from, and what can this everyday object tell us about ourselves?

A sleeper in early modern times believed that sleep was akin to death, with the devil waiting to pounce after darkness. So bed-time rituals were performed at the bedside and wolves’ teeth were often hung around the sleeper’s neck. Iron daggers were dangled over the cradles of infants at night to prevent them from being changed into demon babies.

While we may have outgrown a fear of the devil, sleep expert and neuroscientist Prof Russell Foster fears the modern-day obsession that’s disrupting our sleep – our mobile devices. His advice? Prepare your bed for a good night’s sleep and defend it with a passion.

Also featuring resident public historian Greg Jenner, and Prof Sasha Handley, expert on Early Modern History and sleep during this time.

Producer: Beth Eastwood.

Picture: Bed, Credit: Igor Vershinsky/Getty Images

###

####

Higher quality (128kbps)

Lower quality (64kbps)

Available now

27 minutes

Last on

Sun 19 Jul 2020
23:32GMT

BBC World Service

More episodes

Previous

ToiletThe Origin of Stuff

Next

You are at the last episode

See all episodes from Discovery

Broadcasts

Mon 13 Jul 2020
19:32GMT

BBC World Service except East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa

Tue 14 Jul 2020
03:32GMT

BBC World Service

Tue 14 Jul 2020
08:32GMT

BBC World Service

Space

The eclipses, spacecraft and astronauts changing our view of the Universe

The Curious Cases of Rutherford and Fry

[The Curious Cases of Rutherford and Fry]

A pair of scientific sleuths answer your perplexing questions. Ask them anything!

Podcast

Discovery

Explorations in the world of science.

Similar programmes

By genre:

  • Factual > Science & Nature

By format:

Magazines & Reviews

[BBC World Service homepage]

Online schedule

Help & FAQs

Contact us

News in more than 40 languages


Original source

Reply