For more than a decade, the Explaining History Podcast has helped listeners around the world make sense of modern history. What began in 2012 as a simple experiment—short, accessible episodes explaining major historical events—has grown into a long-running library of carefully researched, thoughtful explorations of the 20th and 21st centuries.

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  • Cinema was the twentieth century’s own art form — the only major artistic medium to be invented after industrialisation and before the digital age. No other form matched its combination of mass reach, emotional immediacy, and technical complexity, and no other was so thoroughly shaped by the specific conditions of the century that produced it.

  • The United States spent more than a decade in Vietnam, dropped more bombs on it than were dropped by all sides in the Second World War, and lost. The defeat was not primarily military. It was political, strategic, and ultimately moral: a failure to understand what the war was, who it was against, and what winning would have required.

  • Rock and roll did not begin on the day Elvis Presley walked into Sun Studio in Memphis. It had been building for decades in the Black churches and juke joints of the American South. What changed in 1955 was not the music but the audience — and, behind the audience, the industry that decided white teenagers were ready to buy it.

  • Writing a book like God Forgives, Brothers Don’t during the long twilight of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, journalist Jasper Craven discovered that the pipeline feeding young men into America’s fighting forces wasn’t just a response to war—it was a carefully engineered system. What he found was a sprawling network of military schools, ROTC programs, and a cultural pedagogy that had spent centuries convincing American boys that the path to manhood ran straight through the barracks. The result is a searing investigation into how the US military has become the nation’s primary engine of masculinity, and how that engine is…

  • In 1991, George H.W. Bush promised a “new world order” — a world in which law and cooperation would replace force and rivalry. Within three years, 800,000 people had been murdered in Rwanda in a hundred days while the international community watched. The 1990s were not a liberal peace. They were a laboratory for the failures that would define the century to come.

  • When Betty Friedan named “the problem that has no name” in 1963, she gave language to a dissatisfaction that millions of women had been living without the words to describe. What followed — the women’s liberation movement of the 1960s and 1970s — was the most far-reaching cultural revolutionCultural Revolution Mao Zedong’s decade-long campaign of radical political and social transformation launched in China in 1966, in which Red Guards attacked ‘capitalist roaders’ and ‘counter-revolutionaries’, destroying cultural heritage, paralysing the education system, and killing an estimated half million to two million people. The Cultural Revolution was Mao’s response to his political marginalisation following the catastrophic Great Leap Forward. In 1966, bypassing the party apparatus that had constrained him, Mao appealed directly to youth — mobilising millions of students as Red Guards to ‘bombard the headquarters’ of the party bureaucracy. Red Guards attacked teachers, intellectuals, party officials, and anyone associated with ‘old culture, old customs, old habits, old ideas.’ Universities were closed; professors were paraded through streets in dunce caps; historical monuments, temples, and artworks were destroyed. An entire generation lost its education. The party establishment — including future leader Deng Xiaoping — was purged, imprisoned, or sent to rural re-education camps. The violence was not centralised but diffuse, as competing Red Guard factions turned on each other in cities across the country. By 1968, the chaos had become ungovernable and Mao deployed the People’s Liberation Army to restore order, sending urban youth to the countryside in what was simultaneously a pacification measure and a punishment. The Cultural Revolution formally ended with Mao’s death in 1976 and the arrest of the Gang of Four; the Chinese Communist Party’s 1981 assessment held that it had been a catastrophic error for which Mao bore primary responsibility. The Cultural Revolution exposed the fundamental instability of Maoist politics: a system premised on continuous revolutionary struggle could not achieve the institutional consolidation needed to govern a modern state without either betraying its revolutionary principles or destroying the institutions that made governance possible. The revolution consumed itself. More broadly, it illustrates the particular danger of charismatic authoritarian rule combined with ideological purity demands: once the standard of ideological correctness is deployed as a political weapon, there is no institutional check on its escalation. Everyone becomes potentially guilty; denunciation becomes survival strategy; the most radical faction wins by outbidding all others. The children who spent their formative years as Red Guards — the generation that Mao called upon to smash the old world — were the same generation that had to rebuild China’s institutions in the decades that followed, carrying the trauma of what they had done and what had been done to them. of the postwar era. It was also an unfinished one.

  • The fall of the Berlin Wall on 9 November 1989 was, in a sense, a bureaucratic accident. But the accident was only possible because the system behind the wall had already ceased to function. This is the story of how the Cold WarCold War The geopolitical and ideological confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union that dominated global politics from 1947 to 1991. It was fought not through direct military conflict between the superpowers but through proxy wars, arms races, espionage, and ideological competition across the developing world. The Cold War began before the Second World War had fully ended: American and Soviet disagreements over the post-war order in Europe were visible at Yalta in February 1945 and had hardened into open confrontation by 1947, when the Truman Doctrine committed the United States to resisting Soviet expansion and the Marshall Plan began binding Western Europe to American economic leadership. The term itself was popularised by journalist Walter Lippmann in 1947, capturing the essential quality of a conflict that neither side could allow to become hot — because both possessed nuclear weapons capable of annihilating the other’s cities. The resulting stalemate was managed through deterrence, alliance systems (NATO in the West, the Warsaw Pact in the East), and the deliberate avoidance of direct superpower confrontation even while both sides fought intense proxy wars in Korea, Vietnam, Angola, Afghanistan, and dozens of other theatres. The Cold War was simultaneously a strategic competition and an ideological one: each side claimed to represent the future of humanity, and each used development aid, propaganda, cultural diplomacy, and covert action to advance its model in the non-aligned world. It ended not with a military defeat but with the internal collapse of the Soviet system between 1989 and 1991. The Cold War’s most important characteristic was its globality: what began as a European dispute about occupation zones became a worldwide competition that shaped the politics of every continent. For the United States, it justified interventions that overthrew democratic governments (Iran 1953, Guatemala 1954, Chile 1973) on the grounds that any leftist government was a Soviet beachhead; for the Soviet Union, it justified the crushing of reform movements within its own bloc (Hungary 1956, Czechoslovakia 1968) on the grounds that any deviation threatened the socialist camp. The Cold War’s legacy is therefore not only the fall of the Berlin Wall but the long list of democracies destroyed, developmental alternatives foreclosed, and civil wars fuelled in the name of containing the other side. The Third World paid the price for a confrontation between two powers that never actually fought each other. ended — and why the world it made was so different from what anyone expected.

  • In August 1981, three days after eleven thousand members of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organisation walked off the job in defiance of a federal law prohibiting strikes by government employees, President Ronald Reagan fired all of them, banned them from federal employment for life, and ordered the Federal Aviation Administration to begin immediately training replacements. The action was not unprecedented — there was legal authority for it — but no president had previously used that authority in this way against a union of middle-class professionals who had, moreover, endorsed Reagan in the 1980 election. The PATCO strike was broken…

  • In the spring of 1968, something happened that had not happened before and has not happened since: a set of political explosions occurred simultaneously in countries that had almost nothing in common — in their economies, their political systems, their social structures, their histories — but that nonetheless felt, to those participating in them and to those watching from outside, as if they were expressions of a single underlying rupture. Students in Paris built barricades in the Latin Quarter and triggered a general strike that briefly seemed capable of ending the Fifth Republic. Students in Prague celebrated a Communist Party…

  • Room at the Top: The Angry Young Men and the Class War in British Culture

    On the evening of 8 May 1956, the Royal Court Theatre in Sloane Square, London, staged the premiere of a new play by a twenty-six-year-old actor and writer from Fulham named John Osborne. The audience that night included a mixture of established theatre critics and younger spectators who had been drawn in by word of mouth and a sense — difficult to define precisely but real — that something was about to happen.

  • The City That Fell: Nanjing 1937 and the Atrocity the World Watched

    On the morning of 13 December 1937, Japanese troops entered the Chinese city of Nanjing. The city had been the capital of the Nationalist government, which had fled westward ten days earlier, leaving behind a population of perhaps half a million civilians and a garrison of soldiers who had largely melted away into the city’s streets, stripped of their uniforms.

  • The Sound Before the Marching: Jazz, Blues, and the Long Grammar of Black Freedom

    The demographic transformation that made Black music audible to a mass American audience began in the decade before World War I and accelerated dramatically during and after it. The Great Migration — the movement of Black Southerners out of the Jim Crow South toward the industrial cities of the North — reshaped the human geography of the United States and carried with it the musical cultures of the Mississippi Delta, the Georgia sea islands, the Texas plains, and the New Orleans streets.

  • The War Without a Name: France, Algeria, and the Limits of the Republic

    On 1 November 1954, a series of coordinated attacks across Algeria announced the birth of a new organisation and the start of a conflict that would, over the next seven and a half years, kill somewhere between three hundred thousand and a million people — the uncertainty in that figure is itself historically significant — and fundamentally transform both Algeria and France.

  • The Box in the Corner: How Television Learned to Behave

    In the spring of 1939, the Radio Corporation of America unveiled a remarkable device at the New York World’s Fair. David Sarnoff, RCA’s imperious president, declared television the newest wonder of a wonder-making age. Families queued to peer into a cathode-ray screen where blurry figures moved against grey backgrounds, and the moment was recorded for posterity as the birth of an industry.

  • The Ruins and What Remained: European Art and Film After the Second World War

    The Europe that emerged from the Second World War in 1945 was a continent of ruins — physical, moral, and institutional. How artists and filmmakers responded to that destruction, what they chose to show and what they could not bring themselves to face, tells us as much about the possibilities and limits of cultural reconstructionReconstruction Full Description:The period immediately following the Civil War (1865–1877) when the federal government attempted to integrate formerly enslaved people into society. Its premature end and the subsequent rollback of rights necessitated the Civil Rights Movement a century later. Reconstruction saw the passage of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments and the election of Black politicians across the South. However, it ended with the withdrawal of federal troops and the rise of Jim Crow. The Civil Rights Movement is often described as the “Second Reconstruction,” an attempt to finish the work that was abandoned in 1877. Critical Perspective:Understanding Reconstruction is essential to understanding the Civil Rights Movement. It provides the historical lesson that legal rights are fragile and temporary without federal enforcement. The “failure” of Reconstruction was not due to Black incapacity, but to a lack of national political will to defend Black rights against white violence—a dynamic that activists in the 1960s were determined not to repeat.
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    as any political history of the period.

  • The Alliance That Could Not Hold: The KMT, the CCP, and the Fracture That Made Modern China

    The founding of the People’s Republic of ChinaRepublic of China Full Description:The state established on January 1, 1912, succeeding the Qing Dynasty. It was the first republic in Asia, but its early years were plagued by political instability, the betrayal of democratic norms by Yuan Shikai, and fragmentation into warlordism. The Republic of China was envisioned by Sun Yat-sen as a modern, democratic nation-state. It adopted a five-colored flag representing the unity of the five major ethnic groups (Han, Manchu, Mongol, Hui, and Tibetan). However, the central government in Beijing quickly lost control of the provinces. Critical Perspective:The early Republic illustrates the “crisis of sovereignty.” While it had the forms of a republic (a president, a parliament), it lacked the substance. It could not collect taxes efficiently or command the loyalty of the army. It remained a “phantom republic” internationally recognized but domestically impotent, existing in a state of semi-colonialism until the nationalist consolidation in the late 1920s.
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    on 1 October 1949 was the culmination of a civil war that had been running, in one form or another, since 1927. But to understand why that war ended as it did — with Mao’s Communist forces victorious and Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist government in flight to Taiwan — you have to go back to the alliance that preceded it: the United Front, and the catastrophic collapse that made the eventual reckoning inevitable.

  • Washington Goes to Hollywood: The Studios, the War Department, and the Co-production of American Victory

    When the United States entered the Second World War, Hollywood did not wait to be asked. The studios mobilised with a speed and enthusiasm that surprised even the government agencies tasked with directing them. What followed was one of the most remarkable experiments in democratic propaganda in modern history — a partnership between the world’s most powerful entertainment industry and a government fighting for its survival.

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Listen by Topic

Browse curated collections of Explaining History podcast episodes by topic — each page brings together the essential episodes on a key historical subject.

Fascism & the Far Right

The Spanish Civil War, Vichy France, Nazi genocide, and the post-war far right.

Stalin & Soviet Terror

The Great PurgeThe Great Purge Full Description:A campaign of political repression and persecution that targeted the Communist Party itself, the military leadership, and the intelligentsia. It was a mechanism to consolidate absolute power by eliminating all potential rivals, real or imagined. The Great Purge (or the Great Terror) was characterized by widespread police surveillance, show trials, and arbitrary executions. It specifically targeted the “Old Bolsheviks”—the original revolutionaries who had served with Lenin—replacing them with a new generation of bureaucrats who owed their loyalty and positions solely to the supreme leader. Critical Perspective:This event marked the final betrayal of the revolution’s democratic potential. It created a society paralyzed by fear, where denunciation became a survival strategy and trust between citizens evaporated. By decimating the experienced military command and the intellectual elite, the purge severely weakened the state’s capacity, leaving it vulnerable on the eve of foreign invasion.
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, the GulagGulag Full Description:The government agency that administered the vast network of forced labor camps. Far more than just a prison system, it was a central component of the Soviet economy, using slave labor to extract resources from the most inhospitable regions of the country. The Gulag system institutionalized political repression. Millions of “enemies of the people”—ranging from political dissidents and intellectuals to petty criminals—were arrested and transported to camps to work in mining, timber, and construction. Critical Perspective:Critically, the Gulag was an economic necessity for the Stalinist system. The “Economic Miracle” of the Soviet Union relied heavily on this reservoir of unpaid, coerced labor to complete dangerous infrastructure projects that free labor would not undertake. It signifies the ultimate reduction of the human being to a unit of production, to be worked until exhaustion and then replaced.
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, Stalingrad, and the Soviet state’s war on its own people.

The Iranian Revolution

The White RevolutionWhite Revolution Full Description:The White Revolution was a project of authoritarian modernization. It sought to break the power of traditional landlords through land redistribution and to rapidly industrialize the economy. It was billed as a bloodless (“white”) revolution to prevent a communist (“red”) one. Critical Perspective:Despite lofty goals, the reforms destabilized the social order. The land reforms often failed to provide peasants with enough resources to farm effectively, driving millions into urban slums where they became foot soldiers for the revolution. Furthermore, the rapid secularization alienated the powerful merchant class (Bazaaris) and the clergy, creating a united front of opposition against the Shah., the Neocons, the 2025 Israeli strikes, and the full arc of US–Iran confrontation.

Neoliberalism & Thatcherism

From the post-war welfare state to the Thatcher revolution and its legacy.

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