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    18th century

    Explore " 18th century" with insightful episodes like "The Mechanical 'Turk': Wouldn't You Prefer a Good Game Of Chess?", "To Be or Not to Be Shakespeare: The Forgeries of William-Henry Ireland", "Marie Antoinette: Her Life and Legacy, Misunderstood and Misrepresented", "Canaletto" and "Bearing Witness: Les Anneaux de la Mémoire" from podcasts like ""Criminalia", "Criminalia", "The Compendium Podcast: An Assembly of Fascinating and Intriguing Things", "Stuff You Missed in History Class" and "Bearing Witness: The Impact of Memorialization"" and more!

    Episodes (95)

    The Mechanical 'Turk': Wouldn't You Prefer a Good Game Of Chess?

    The Mechanical 'Turk': Wouldn't You Prefer a Good Game Of Chess?

    During the 18th century, early animatronics were hot. They were featured in circuses, carnivals, and other touring exhibitions, and were usually built and operated with various parts like axles, chains, cogs, gears, levers, pulleys, wheels, wind-up keys – you get the point. For Austrian Empress Maria Theresa, in 1769, Hungarian inventor Wolfgang von Kempelen’s created the Mechanical Turk, a chess-playing machine that could beat almost any person who played against it. The Turk appeared to be a fully functional artificial intelligence to those who saw and interacted with it. It left audiences delighted, but baffled as to how it worked -- until a young poet named Edgar Allan Poe convinced many audiences it was not what it seemed.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    To Be or Not to Be Shakespeare: The Forgeries of William-Henry Ireland

    To Be or Not to Be Shakespeare: The Forgeries of William-Henry Ireland

    "Done to death by slanderous tongues," wrote William Shakespeare in his play, 'Much Ado About Nothing'. Shakespeare may be a renowned English playwright, poet, and actor, but, he has a bit of a credibility problem among some circles, and he has for quite a long time. It's known as the 'Shakespeare Authorship Question', and we're going to talk about some theories that suggest Shakespeare was a fake -- before we talk about a man who wrote a five-act play pretending to be the Bard. That could not have been easy. So, how now, good friends, and welcome.

     

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Marie Antoinette: Her Life and Legacy, Misunderstood and Misrepresented

    Marie Antoinette: Her Life and Legacy, Misunderstood and Misrepresented

    In this episode of The Compendium: An assembly of fascinating and intriguing things, we're going to talk about the life of Marie Antoinette, the controversial and misunderstood queen of France. From her childhood in Austria and marriage to Louis XVI at the tender age of 14, to her opulent life at Versailles and the French Revolution, we'll explore the key events that shaped her life and ultimately led to her tragic demise.

    Join us as we dive into the intricacies of court life, the gossip that swirled around the queen, and the impact of her extravagant lifestyle on public opinion. We'll also discuss the infamous "let them eat cake" myth and how it contributed to her tarnished reputation. As we move through the tumultuous events of the revolution, we'll examine Marie Antoinette's imprisonment, the heartbreaking loss of her children, and her final moments at the guillotine.

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    Canaletto

    Canaletto

    Canaletto rose to fame painting remarkable views of Venice. He became especially popular with wealthy tourists, who commissioned his paintings as souvenirs of their travels.

    Research:

    • Constable, William G.. "Canaletto". Encyclopedia Britannica, 14 Oct. 2022, https://www.britannica.com/biography/Canaletto
    • Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "War of the Austrian Succession". Encyclopedia Britannica, 3 Mar. 2023, https://www.britannica.com/event/War-of-the-Austrian-Succession
    • Binion, A., & Barton, L.  Canaletto. Grove Art Online.Retrieved 17 Apr. 2023, from https://www.oxfordartonline.com/groveart/view/10.1093/gao/9781884446054.001.0001/oao-9781884446054-e-7000013627
    • “The Stonemason’s Yard.” The National Gallery. https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/canaletto-the-stonemasons-yard
    • “London: Interior of the Rotunda at Ranelagh.” The National Gallery. https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/canaletto-london-interior-of-the-rotunda-at-ranelagh
    • “Canaletto’s Drawings.” Royal Collection Trust. https://www.rct.uk/collection/themes/exhibitions/canaletto-in-venice/the-queens-gallery-palace-of-holyroodhouse/canalettos-drawings
    • Baetjer, Katherine and J.G. Links. “Canaletto.” Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Harry N. Abrams, Inc. 1989. Accessed through The Met: Watson Library Digital Collections. https://libmma.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15324coll10/id/49280
    • “Imaginary View of Venice.” The Met. https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/335287#:~:text=It%20was%20in%20these%20years,representing%20actual%20sites%2C%20others%20imaginary.
    • Erkelens, C. J. (2020). Perspective on Canaletto’s Paintings of Piazza San Marco in Venice, Art & Perception, 8(1), 49-67. doi: https://doi.org/10.1163/22134913-20191131
    • “Canaletto.” The Art Story. https://www.theartstory.org/artist/canaletto/
    • “Canaletto.” National Gallery of Art. https://www.nga.gov/collection/artist-info.1080.html?artistId=1080&pageNumber=1
    • “Piazzo San Marco.” The Met. https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/435839
    • “Architectural Capriccio.” https://www.themorgan.org/collection/drawings/141078
    • “Owen McSwiney.” The Fitzwilliam Museum. https://fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/objects-and-artworks/highlights/context/patrons-donors-collectors/owen-mcswiny

     

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Bearing Witness: Les Anneaux de la Mémoire

    Bearing Witness: Les Anneaux de la Mémoire

    In 1992, Les Anneaux de la Mémoire (The Shackles of Memory) was an exhibition which was focused on the city of Nantes, France and its role and complicity as a trading port along the route of enslaved people in the 18th century. The exhibition was such a success that it became an association in Nantes that to this day publishes journals, researches and curates memorials and exhibitions, and commemorates people who were enslaved in the Western slave trades. To expand our discussions about the memorialization and commemoration of slavery outside of the US, we have the honor of speaking with Researcher, author and Vice President of the association, Jean-Marc Masseau, Project Coordinator, Barbara Chiron, and Secretary of the  Les Anneaux de la Mémoire association, Christine Renard in this episode. 


    This is one of three of our episodes that discuss the topic of memorialization and commemoration of the innumerous lives taken and impacted by the Atlantic slave trade. Please be sure to listen to the two other episodes in conversation with the Equal Justice Initiative which operates the Legacy Museum and the National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Alabama, and The Whitney Plantation in Wallace, Louisiana, the first slavery museum and memorial in America.


    This episode is brought to you by Dr. Stephanie Arel and produced by Shrine13.

    Petty Treason: The Horrifying Story of Catherine Hayes

    Petty Treason: The Horrifying Story of Catherine Hayes

    Travel back in time with us to 18th century England, where one Catherine Hayes is never satisfied. She jumps from one lover to another, even after she’s married to hardworking John Hayes. Unfortunately for John, Catherine devises a plan that will give her total control of the house. With the help of two of her lovers, John Hayes is violently murdered on March 1, 1726. But Catherine’s freedom is short lived and her crimes afford her a brutal and terrifying end.  Grab a cup of tea and brace for a very strange and bizarre case. 

    Tea of the Day: Book Hangover by Riddle’s Tea Shop

    Theme Music by Brad Frank

    Sources:

    Episode 8 American College Campus Part 2

    Episode 8 American College Campus Part 2

    Notes for episodes 7 and 8
    American College and University Campus

    In episodes 7 and 8, we look at the history of the American college and university campus from the commencement of British American settlement through modern times. The open and public spaces of campuses, as well as the design of buildings and overall layouts, reflect societal trends, philosophies, and prejudices as much as the changing purpose of higher education itself. We explore starting with the first colleges, their charters and founding as institutions meant to educate upper class white men through the post World War II period that has seen a democratization of higher education.  

    Our moments in equity for these two episodes look at how college establishment and funding were intimately connected to the slave trade, slave labor, and the profits from the sale of slaves in the British colonies and in the pre-Civil War United States.

     

    Resources

    Paul Venable Turner, Campus: An American planning tradition (MIT Press 1987)

     

    A History of Stanford, Stanford University (Undated) – https://www.stanford.edu/about/history/ 

     

    College of William & Mary, Wikipedia (Updated Feb. 17, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/College_of_William_%26_Mary 

    Royal Charter (Feb. 8, 1693) [posted on Internet Archive Wayback Machine (Updated Mar. 26, 2012) – https://web.archive.org/web/20120529035803/http://scdb.swem.wm.edu/wiki/index.php/Charter#Transcription_of_the_Royal_Charter]

     

    History, Columbia University in the City of New York (Undated) – https://www.columbia.edu/content/history 

     

    Frederick Law Olmsted: College and School Campuses, National Park Service (undated) –  https://www.nps.gov/frla/learn/historyculture/college-campuses.htm 

     

    Judith Schiff, Resources on Yale History: A Brief History of Yale, Yale University Library (Updated June 22, 2021) – https://guides.library.yale.edu/yalehistory 

     

    Rebecca Woodham, David J. Trowbridge, and Clio Admin, Nott Memorial, Union College, Clio: Your Guide to History (August 1, 2021, accessed Mar. 15, 2022) – https://theclio.com/entry/6225 

     

    Benjamin Henry Latrobe (1764-1820), Dickinson College Archives & Special Collections (2005) – https://archives.dickinson.edu/people/benjamin-henry-latrobe-1764-1820 

     

    Benjamin Henry Latrobe, Wikipedia (Updated Nov. 23, 2021) –  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Henry_Latrobe 

     

    Lisa Chase, Imagining Utopia: Landscape Design at Smith College, 1871-1910, 65 New England Quarterly no. 4, p. 560 (Dec. 1992) – https://garden.smith.edu/sites/garden/files/imagining-utopia-lisa-chase.pdf 

     

    Jim McCarthy, Spotlight on…Gallaudet University, National Association for Olmsted Parks (Mar. 14, 2022) – https://olmsted200.org/spotlight-on-gallaudet-university/ 

     

    Rebecca Beatrice Brooks, History of Cambridge, Massachusetts, History of Massachusetts Blog (May 30, 2021) – https://historyofmassachusetts.org/cambridge-ma-history/ 

     

    Brief History of Cambridge, Mass., Cambridge Historical Commission (undated) – https://www.cambridgema.gov/historic/cambridgehistory 

     

    Harvard Square is famous for a lot of things, History, Harvard Square Business Association – https://www.harvardsquare.com/history/ 

     

    John Harvard (clergyman), Wikipedia (Updated July 28, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Harvard_(clergyman) 

     

    Michael Johnson, 94 University Place: Old Mill, Burlington 1830 (Undated) – https://www.uvm.edu/histpres/HPJ/burl1830/streets/university/oldmill.html 

     

    Prof. Thomas Visser, Old Mill, University of Vermont (Undated; based on a professional report on the history of Old Mill prepared in 1988 by Thomas Visser and MaryJo Llewellyn of the UVM Historic Preservation Program's Architectural Conservation and Education Service.) – https://www.uvm.edu/~campus/oldmill/oldmillhistory.html 

     

    Vassar College, Wikipedia (Updated July 5, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vassar_College#History 

     

    Historic Horseshoe, South Carolina, University History, University of South Carolina (Undated) – https://www.sc.edu/about/our_history/university_history/historic_horseshoe/index.php 

     

    Lydia Brandt, University of Virginia, Architecture of the, Encyclopedia Virginia (Dec. 14, 2020) – https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/university-of-virginia-the-architecture-of-the/ 

     

    History and Traditions, Washington University in St. Louis (Undated) – https://wustl.edu/about/history-traditions/#:~:text=In%201853%2C%20prominent%20St.,of%20immigrants%20flooded%20into%20St

     

    Smith College, Wikipedia (Updated Aug. 4, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_College 

     

    Smith History, Smith College (Undated) – https://www.smith.edu/about-smith/smith-history 

     

    Moments in Equity

     

    Stephen Smith and Kate Ellis, Shackled Legacy – History shows slavery helped build many U.S. colleges and universities, American Public Media Reports (Sept. 4, 2017) – https://www.apmreports.org/episode/2017/09/04/shackled-legacy 

     

    Yoruhu Williams, Why Thomas Jefferson’s Anti-Slavery Passage Was Removed from the Declaration of Independence, History.com (June 29, 2020) –

    Episode 7 American College Campus Part 1

    Episode 7 American College Campus Part 1

    Notes - Episodes 5 and 6

    Colleges and common space

    In episodes 5 and 6, we look at the history of the American college and university campus from the commencement of British American settlement through modern times. The open and public spaces of campuses, as well as the design of buildings and overall layouts, reflect societal trends, philosophies, and prejudices as much as the changing purpose of higher education itself. We explore starting with the first colleges, their charters and founding as institutions meant to educate upper class white men through the post World War II period that has seen a democratization of higher education.  

    Our moments in equity for these two episodes look at how college establishment and funding were intimately connected to the slave trade, slave labor, and the profits from the sale of slaves in the British colonies and in the pre-Civil War United States.

     

    Resources

    Paul Venable Turner, Campus: An American planning tradition (MIT Press 1987)

     

    A History of Stanford, Stanford University (Undated) – https://www.stanford.edu/about/history/ 

     

    College of William & Mary, Wikipedia (Updated Feb. 17, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/College_of_William_%26_Mary 

    Royal Charter (Feb. 8, 1693) [posted on Internet Archive Wayback Machine (Updated Mar. 26, 2012) – https://web.archive.org/web/20120529035803/http://scdb.swem.wm.edu/wiki/index.php/Charter#Transcription_of_the_Royal_Charter]

     

    History, Columbia University in the City of New York (Undated) – https://www.columbia.edu/content/history 

     

    Frederick Law Olmsted: College and School Campuses, National Park Service (undated) –  https://www.nps.gov/frla/learn/historyculture/college-campuses.htm 

     

    Judith Schiff, Resources on Yale History: A Brief History of Yale, Yale University Library (Updated June 22, 2021) – https://guides.library.yale.edu/yalehistory 

     

    Rebecca Woodham, David J. Trowbridge, and Clio Admin, Nott Memorial, Union College, Clio: Your Guide to History (August 1, 2021, accessed Mar. 15, 2022) – https://theclio.com/entry/6225 

     

    Benjamin Henry Latrobe (1764-1820), Dickinson College Archives & Special Collections (2005) – https://archives.dickinson.edu/people/benjamin-henry-latrobe-1764-1820 

     

    Benjamin Henry Latrobe, Wikipedia (Updated Nov. 23, 2021) –  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Henry_Latrobe 

     

    Lisa Chase, Imagining Utopia: Landscape Design at Smith College, 1871-1910, 65 New England Quarterly no. 4, p. 560 (Dec. 1992) – https://garden.smith.edu/sites/garden/files/imagining-utopia-lisa-chase.pdf 

     

    Jim McCarthy, Spotlight on…Gallaudet University, National Association for Olmsted Parks (Mar. 14, 2022) – https://olmsted200.org/spotlight-on-gallaudet-university/ 

     

    Rebecca Beatrice Brooks, History of Cambridge, Massachusetts, History of Massachusetts Blog (May 30, 2021) – https://historyofmassachusetts.org/cambridge-ma-history/ 

     

    Brief History of Cambridge, Mass., Cambridge Historical Commission (undated) – https://www.cambridgema.gov/historic/cambridgehistory 

     

    Harvard Square is famous for a lot of things, History, Harvard Square Business Association – https://www.harvardsquare.com/history/ 

     

    John Harvard (clergyman), Wikipedia (Updated July 28, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Harvard_(clergyman) 

     

    Michael Johnson, 94 University Place: Old Mill, Burlington 1830 (Undated) – https://www.uvm.edu/histpres/HPJ/burl1830/streets/university/oldmill.html 

     

    Prof. Thomas Visser, Old Mill, University of Vermont (Undated; based on a professional report on the history of Old Mill prepared in 1988 by Thomas Visser and MaryJo Llewellyn of the UVM Historic Preservation Program's Architectural Conservation and Education Service.) – https://www.uvm.edu/~campus/oldmill/oldmillhistory.html 

     

    Vassar College, Wikipedia (Updated July 5, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vassar_College#History 

     

    Historic Horseshoe, South Carolina, University History, University of South Carolina (Undated) – https://www.sc.edu/about/our_history/university_history/historic_horseshoe/index.php 

     

    Lydia Brandt, University of Virginia, Architecture of the, Encyclopedia Virginia (Dec. 14, 2020) – https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/university-of-virginia-the-architecture-of-the/ 

     

    History and Traditions, Washington University in St. Louis (Undated) – https://wustl.edu/about/history-traditions/#:~:text=In%201853%2C%20prominent%20St.,of%20immigrants%20flooded%20into%20St

     

    Smith College, Wikipedia (Updated Aug. 4, 2022) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_College 

     

    Smith History, Smith College (Undated) – https://www.smith.edu/about-smith/smith-history 

     

    Moments in Equity

     

    Stephen Smith and Kate Ellis, Shackled Legacy – History shows slavery helped build many U.S. colleges and universities, American Public Media Reports (Sept. 4, 2017) – https://www.apmreports.org/episode/2017/09/04/shackled-legacy 

     

    Yoruhu Williams, Why Thomas Jefferson’s Anti-Slavery Passage Was Removed from the Declaration of Independence, History.com (June 29, 2020) –

    "I've Got a Thing": Christopher Ludwick's Bowl with Lydia Garver

    "I've Got a Thing": Christopher Ludwick's Bowl with Lydia Garver

    “I’ve Got a Thing,” the first season of The Premodern Podcast, is a series of conversations about the objects, documents, and stories that premodernists just can’t stop thinking about. In this episode, Lydia Garver introduces us to Christopher Ludwick and his porcelain bowl and makes an argument for why archaeologists should be opposed to time travel.

    Dr. Lydia Garver is the Associate Director of the Center for Premodern Studies. She is a historical archaeologist by training and has worked primarily on Pennsylvania German sites. She is interviewed by Juliette Cherbuliez, Professor of French and Director of the Center for Premodern Studies, at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities.

    Three quick notes from Lydia: 1) In this episode, when I mention printed ceramics, I say screen -printed which perhaps seemed accessible at the time, but isn’t representative of the production process which was a transfer printing technique. Here is a brief overview of the process from the National Park Service. 2.) I intentionally don’t want to include images of porcelain bowls with this episode since we don’t know what Ludwick’s looked like, but a cookie board believed to be associated with Christopher Ludwick is in the collection of the Museum of the American Revolution. The object notes say the board was donated by Ludwick’s descendants. The Rush biography does not indicate that Ludwick had any children, but perhaps it was donated by members of Ludwick's extended family. 3) Apologies to folks who know things about naval history and terminology for my likely flagrant misuse of the phrase “merchant marine.”

    Link to Christopher Ludwick’s Biography by Dr. Benjamin Rush “An Account of the Life and Character of Christopher Ludwick, Late Citizen of Philadelphia, and Baker-General of the Army of the United States During the Revolutionary War  Ludwick’s bowl is featured on pages 16 and 17.

    Link to Transcript for this Episode

    Link to Learn about the Center for Premodern Studies 

    Link to Support this Podcast

    Our theme music is “Dangerous Diamonds” by Rogue Valley written by Chris Koza.

    Our intermission music is "Summer is icumen in" by Anya Badaldavood.

    This episode was produced by Moinak Choudhury.

    Transcript by Karen Soto

    The conversations on this podcast represent the framing and views of individual scholars which are not necessarily shared by the Center for Premodern Studies, the University of Minnesota, and their staff and affiliates.

    Democratic Experiment: Amel Ahmed on figuring out what’s happening

    Democratic Experiment: Amel Ahmed on figuring out what’s happening

    Guest Amel Ahmed ventured to college from an urban immigrant community and she spent much of her college career trying to figure out what was happening—academically, socially, culturally. She realized that she found comfort in embedding herself in the liminal spaces and really probing them, using the eye of an astute ethnographer and sleuthing historian. By the time she was ready to leave her undergraduate experience, she had a laser focus on continuing to study the Middle East and how ideals and systems of democracy could be spread there.

    In her first semester of grad school, however, a professor made a comment about the very notion of democracy that took her right back to asking what was happening and how that informs the way you approach the ideas that are at your core.

    In this episode, find out from Amel how asking the fundamental question of “what are we really doing here” is often the only way to know where we are headed…on Roads Taken with Leslie Jennings Rowley.

     

    About This Episode’s Guest

    Amel Ahmed is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. She specializes in democratic studies—approaching the work from historical and comparative perspectives, focusing on both Europe and the United States. She is particularly interested in elections, voting systems, legislative politics, party development, and voting rights.

     

    Find more episodes at https://roadstakenshow.com

     

    Executive Producer/Host: Leslie Jennings Rowley

    Music: Brian Burrows

    Email the show at RoadsTakenShow@gmail.com

    Find more episodes at https://roadstakenshow.com

     

    Executive Producer/Host: Leslie Jennings Rowley

    Music: Brian Burrows

    Email the show at RoadsTakenShow@gmail.com

     

    161. Sentiment

    161. Sentiment

    Empathy and kindness can be noble concepts in themselves, but as terms are thrown around enough to have become buzzwords, and in the process lose some of their meaning and purpose. Audiomakers Sandhya Dirks and Julia Furlan, and academic and podcaster Hannah McGregor, discuss the value and pitfalls of appealing to the emotions.

    Content note: there are mentions of parental death, cancer in adults and babies, and suicide. There are also a few category B swears.

    Find out more about this episode and get extra information about the topics therein at theallusionist.org/sentiment, where there's also a transcript.

    The Allusionist's online home is theallusionist.org. Stay in touch at twitter.com/allusionistshow, facebook.com/allusionistshow and instagram.com/allusionistshow.

    The Allusionist is produced by me, Helen Zaltzman. The music is by Martin Austwick. Hear Martin’s own songs via palebirdmusic.com.

    Support the show: http://patreon.com/allusionist

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Letter to National Child Labor Committee - A Fictional Historical Perspective for Kids

    Letter to National Child Labor Committee - A Fictional Historical Perspective for Kids

    Labor Committee  is to be used with the resource Historical Perspectives from Mr. Mault's Marketplace from Teachers Pay Teachers.

    Check out all of the Historical Perspective packs by clicking here.
    These packs are the perfect way to have your students learn about history, while reading, writing, and thinking deeply about primary sources.

    All rights are reserved. This content cannot be used for ANY commercial purpose, including in free or paid resources or products. Please contact danmault@gmail.com with any questions.

    Industrial Revolution - A Non-Fiction Historical Perspective for Kids

    Industrial Revolution - A Non-Fiction Historical Perspective for Kids

    The Industrial Revolution  is to be used with the resource Historical Perspectives from Mr. Mault's Marketplace from Teachers Pay Teachers.

    Check out all of the Historical Perspective packs by clicking here.
    These packs are the perfect way to have your students learn about history, while reading, writing, and thinking deeply about primary sources.

    All rights are reserved. This content cannot be used for ANY commercial purpose, including in free or paid resources or products. Please contact danmault@gmail.com with any questions.

    Jack Sheppard, Prison-Breaker

    Jack Sheppard, Prison-Breaker

    Jack Sheppard became sort of a serial breakout artist in 18th-century England. He was a real person who became a folk hero, but many of the accounts of his life are suspect.

    Research:

    • Buckley, Matthew. “Sensations of Celebrity: Jack Sheppard and the Mass Audience.” Victorian Studies. 3/1/2002.
    • Defoe, Daniel (attributed). “A narrative of all the robberies, escapes, &c. of John Sheppard : giving an exact description of the manner of his wonderful escape from the castle in Newgate.” London. 1724.
    • Defoe, Daniel (attributed). “The History of the Remarkable Life of John Sheppard, Containing a Particular Account of his Many Robberies and Escapes.” 1724.
    • E., Gentleman in Town. “Authentic memoirs of the life and surprising adventures of John Sheppard : who was executed at Tyburn, November the 16th, 1724 : by way of familiar letters from a gentleman in town, to his friend and correspondent in the country.” London, 1724.
    • Gillingham, Lauren. "Ainsworth's Jack Sheppard and the Crimes of History." SEL Studies in English Literature 1500-1900, vol. 49 no. 4, 2009, p. 879-906. Project MUSE, doi:10.1353/sel.0.0081.
    • Harman, Claire. "Writing for the mob: Moral panic about a Victorian 'handbook of crime'." TLS. Times Literary Supplement, no. 6031, 2 Nov. 2018, p. 25. Gale General OneFile, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A632755026/GPS?u=mlin_n_melpub&sid=bookmark-GPS&xid=86b28327. Accessed 21 Apr. 2022.
    • Old Bailey Proceedings Online (www.oldbaileyonline.org, version 8.0, 22 April 2022), August 1724, trial of Joseph Sheppard (t17240812-52).
    • Old Bailey Proceedings Online (www.oldbaileyonline.org, version 8.0, 22 April 2022), Ordinary of Newgate's Account, November 1724 (OA17241111).
    • Ridgwell, Stephen. “Sheppard’s Warning: A thief who had been dead for more than a century caused a moral panic in the theatres of Victorian London.” History Today. Volume 71 Issue 4 April 2021. https://www.historytoday.com/archive/history-matters/sheppards-warning
    • Stearns, Elizabeth. “A ‘Darling of the Mob’: The Antidisciplinarity of the Jack Sheppard Texts.” Victorian Literature and Culture , 2013, Vol. 41, No. 3 (2013). Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/24575686
    • Sugden, P. Lyon, Elizabeth [nicknamed Edgware Bess] (fl. 1722–1726), prostitute and thief. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 21 Apr. 2022
    • Sugden, P. Sheppard, John [Jack] (1702–1724), thief and prison-breaker. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 21 Apr. 2022

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Angelica Kauffman and Mary Moser

    Angelica Kauffman and Mary Moser

    In this episode we explore the lives and careers of Angelica Kauffman (1741-1807) and Mary Moser (1744-1819), who were the only two female founding members of the Royal Academy of Art, founded in 1768. 
    We will discuss Angelica Kauffman's fame and her unladylike focus on the masculine and epic History painting, considered to be the most respected and accomplished genre of art. As well as her huge achievements and highly successful commissions.
    We will also discuss Mary Moser's career and commitment to the Academy, her work for royalty and her influence among other Academicians.
    Of course we will also explore some of the ways being female affected Moser and Kauffman's place in the RA, including ways in which they were excluded, as symbolically represented in a famous group portrait by Johan Joseph Zoffany. 

    Sources
    Women Artists by Flavia Frigeri
    https://www.apollo-magazine.com/angelica-kauffman-history-painting/
    https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/art-artists/name/mary-moser-ra
    https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/article/ra-magazine-jenny-uglow-angelica-kauffman-ra

    Images
    Instagram - @themuseumoffemininity 

    Swedenborg’s Sudden Choice to Translate Survey into English

    Swedenborg’s Sudden Choice to Translate Survey into English

    We trace the evidence and connect the dots of what happened after Swedenborg published the work Survey. It became the most intense time of Swedenborg’s theological career. We travel to 1769 and witness Swedenborg making decisions that would have ripple effects throughout society in the centuries to come. 

    We have the gift of using the unpublished NCE translations of Survey in this episode. You can read the whole thing for yourself when the NCE translation of Survey comes out in 2022! In the meantime, explore Swedenborg's works available for sale and for free download here: https://swedenborg.com/bookstore/new-century-edition/

    All translations of Swedenborg's published theological works used in this episode are from the New Century Edition.

    REFERENCES:

    Acton, Alfred, ed. and trans. The Letters and Memorials of Emanuel Swedenborg. Bryn Athyn, PA: Swedenborg Scientific Association, 1948. 659, 672, 675. 

    Sigstedt, Cyriel Odhner. The Swedenborg Epic. New York: Bookman Associates, 1952. Chapter 40.

    Swedenborg, Emanuel. A Brief Exposition of the Doctrine of the New Church, Understood in the Apocalypse by the New Jerusalem; Wherein Is Also Demonstrated, that Throughout All the Christian World the Worshipping of Three Gods Is Received, from the Creed of St. Athanasius. [Translated by J. Marchant.] London, 1769.

    ★☆★ABOUT★☆★

    "Inside Off The Left Eye" is an original podcast offering by the Off The Left Eye team with new material every week coming to you on Sundays, hosted by Chelsea Odhner. We study the historical context of Emanuel Swedenborg's (1688-1772) life and works and share fresh insights from the New Century Edition translation of Swedenborg's theological works. Joined by translator and Series Editor Dr. Jonathan Rose and Off The Left Eye host and personality Curtis Childs, we follow threads into the past, discovering that what we find often is eminently relevant to the present.

    Inside Off The Left Eye is a project of the Swedenborg Foundation—a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, independent, educational organization for those seeking to explore spirituality and faith. Learn more at www.swedenborg.com.

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    Jared R. Hardesty - Mutiny & Murder

    Episode 6-Belle

    Episode 6-Belle

    How many times have you seen a dark-skinned woman wearing a high-society 18th-century dress in history books? How much do you know about the lives of people of colour in the 18th century in England? (at least those who were not enslaved)

    And here’s one more: how often have you seen a Black woman starring in a period film?  

    With these and a few other challenging questions, we invite you to listen to our conversation about the film “Belle”. Inspired by the real-life story of Dido Elizabeth Belle, the illegitimate mixed-race daughter of an English aristocrat, this movie introduced us to a historical character we knew nothing about and surprised us immensely by the conversation it opened. Not only did we discover a little jewel in recent cinema making, but also it made us aware of the many clichès and false perspectives, we, as women of colour, are ourselves plagued with. 

    A passionate discussion about the story of a woman with a tough destiny, and how present the story still is nowadays. 

     ***Spoiler alert! While reviewing this film we go through key scenes and may reveal the ending, so be warned of spoilers!***

    Sources & further links:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belle_(2013_film) 

    “A Stitch in Time: Dido Belle” https://youtu.be/GSDDJrlJukM 



    Gin Craze? More Like gINSANITY!

    Gin Craze? More Like gINSANITY!

    To call it a Gin Craze is to be grossly inaccurate; addiction to the spirit in Georgian London created an epidemic of devastating proportions, negatively affecting fertility, mortality, production, and infrastructure throughout the entire city in the 1700s.  In this episode, we explore how gin ascended to control an entire metropolis, and examine the solutions put forth by the government in its numerous attempts to restore health and production to the utterly ravaged city. Join us, as we look at the legacy of this epidemic, as well as the tragedies and innovations it inspired.

    For photos and sources, please see our show notes: https://docs.google.com/document/d/10J6yifuJj77FIoeCGrVXEhFd-u10drFz99crmdAuKoQ/edit

    Also, visit our website at: https://yltpodcast.buzzsprout.com/1810008

    Or, find us on:
    Twitter @YLT_Pod
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