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    20th century

    Explore " 20th century" with insightful episodes like "What happened when electric chairs were imported into Ethiopia for the first time?", "Inscription by Zbigniew Herbert", "My Glass World Tells of Itself by W.S. Graham", "174. Eurovision part 1" and "The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction" from podcasts like ""The Historylogy Podcast", "Words in the Air", "Words in the Air", "פודקאסט פלייליסט" and "Talking Culture"" and more!

    Episodes (100)

    What happened when electric chairs were imported into Ethiopia for the first time?

    What happened when electric chairs were imported into Ethiopia for the first time?

    When Emperor Menelik II of Abyssinia (Ethiopia today) heard about this example of modern technology, he was suitably impressed. He was certain this was exactly what Abyssinia needed to move into the 20th century.

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    174. Eurovision part 1

    174. Eurovision part 1
    סדרה קצרה על השפה באירוויזיון. החל ממילים שרלוונטיות לאירוויזיון וכלה בשפות שמותר או אסור לשיר בהן במסגרת התחרות. גישה שונה לנושא התחרות וניתוח מעניין של החשיבות של התחרות בעולם של היום.
    #מוזיקה #אנגלית #שפה
    The Allushionist - Eurovision

    part 1 - 32 min
    https://pca.st/74v3z9zh

    part 2 - 33 min
    https://pca.st/oa14va6y


    #######


    There aren't many multilingual, multinational television shows that have been running for nearly seven decades. But what makes the Eurovision Song Contest so special to me is not the music, or the dancing, or the costumes that range from spangletastic to tear-off: no, it's the people butting heads about language. Historian Dean Vuletic, author of Postwar Europe and the Eurovision Song Contest, recounts the many changes in Eurovision's language rules, and its language hopes and dreams.

    This is the first of a two-part Eurovisionallusionist. In the next instalment: dictators. Protests. Boom Bang-A-Bang Ding-a-Dong Diggi-Loo Diggi-Ley. Find out more about this episode at theallusionist.org/eurovision1, where there's also a transcript.

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

    Support the show at theallusionist.org/donate and as well as keeping this independent podcast going, you also get glimpses into how the podsausage is made, regular livestreams, AND membership of the delightful Allusioverse Discord community with whom I will be watching the Eurovision final next month.

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

    Our ad partner is Multitude. If you want me to talk lovingly and winningly about your product or thing, sponsor an episode: contact Multitude at multitude.productions/ads. This episode is sponsored by:

    • Bombas, whose mission is to make the comfiest clothes ever, and match every item sold with an equal item donated. Go to bombas.com/allusionist to get 20% off your first purchase.
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    Support the show: http://patreon.com/allusionist

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction

    The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction

    For this episode, Esther Leslie and Louis Porter join us to unpick the mind of one of the 20th century's greatest thinkers Walter Benjamin. In 1935, he wrote an essay called 'The Work of Art in the Age of its Mechanical Reproduction'. During the episode, we reflect on some of the core ideas from the text and apply them to modern-day cultural phenomenons, from machine translation to grand-scale digital art exhibitions. 

    The Radium Girls

    The Radium Girls

    Join Kelli as she gives the history of the Radium Girls - young women who worked in factories painting watches and dials with paint containing RADIUM. The girls were encouraged to use their lips to keep the brushes pointy, and as a result, they were consuming alpha radiation particles from the radioactive radium. The result? Disintegrating bones, rotting necrotic tissue, and painful death.

    Follow the APHOUT podcast for more stories! It also helps me grow the show!

    Sources referenced:
    The Radium Girls: The Dark Story of America’s Shining Women by Kate Moore

    Intro and Outro music credit: Nedric

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    #17 - Inside Good Scribes - Lust in Nabokov's Lolita

    #17 - Inside Good Scribes - Lust in Nabokov's Lolita

    Episode Notes

    In this mini-episode, Daniel and Jeremy explore takeaways, tips, and how Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita  relates to everyday life. Hosted by novelists and entrepreneurs Daniel Breyer & Jeremy Streich, Good Scribes Only is a podcast for curious minds to explore, challenge, and think differently through books. Season 2 focuses on the cardinal vices and virtues: Lust and chastity, gluttony and temperance, greed and charity, sloth and diligence, envy and kindness, wrath and patience, pride and humility. Oftentimes, fiction books can take us out of life’s everyday tangles and help us see reality with new eyes. To further explore your own relationship with Lust and Chastity, look no further than Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita . We hope you enjoy

    Episode Cheat Sheet

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    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) –

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