Explaining History Podcast

Month: May 2025

Explaining History Podcast

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May 2025

May 16, 2025
/ American History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: American History, Social & Cultural History
  • Discussing Mark Twain’s ‘Jim’

    Discussing Mark Twain’s ‘Jim’

    May 16, 2025
    American History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: American History, Social & Cultural History

    The character of Jim in the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain was written as a condemnation of the Jim Crow regimes that were springing up across the South as the Reconstruction Era slowly came to an end. Twain’s Jim was the first Black character in popular American literature that can be thought of as being written in depth and without becoming another racist caricature. The story, set before the civil war, has been the subject of ongoing scholarship and contestation ever since. In t

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  • Melting Point: Russian Jews and the journey to Texas

    Melting Point: Russian Jews and the journey to Texas

    May 15, 2025
    American History, European History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: European History

    In the decade before the First World War over ten thousand Russian Jews travelled across the Atlantic but instead of alighting in New York, where a large Jewish diaspora community was established, they came to Galveston, Texas. Galveston was not the final destination for most of the new arrivals, many travelled across the USA and settled in its rural and urban centres. In this episode of the Explaining History podcast we speak with author Rachel Cockerell, who traces the story of the Galveston J

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  • The Contradictions of Thatcherism

    The Contradictions of Thatcherism

    May 13, 2025
    Modern History, nan, Podcast, Podcast: Modern History

    Margaret Thatcher sought to revive Britain’s fortunes during the 1980s, she was a social conservative and a free market fundamentalist; a contradictory set of ideological positions. The liberation of market forces devastated the social structures that Thatcher claimed to uphold, principally the family, which underwent dramatic transformations throughout the decade as individualism, urbanisation, mobility, rising expectations and declining ideas of deference transformed it. *****STOP PRESS*****I

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  • Trump’s tariff capitulation

    Trump’s tariff capitulation

    May 12, 2025
    American History, Asian History, Economic History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Asian History, Trump

    In a hundred years time will China offshore its manufacturing to poorer countries? Not if it has any sense. Today Trump’s great retreat from the tariff war began in earnest as some cold economic realities have begun to bite, but what is the historical long view here? This episode explores how offshoring and America’s weakening dollar supremacy, combined with the ownership of nearly $2 trillion of debt by China and Japan place America in an economic position it has never experienced in its nearly

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  • The Paris Commune of 1871: Radicalism and Repression

    The Paris Commune of 1871: Radicalism and Repression

    May 11, 2025
    France, revolution

    The Paris Commune of 1871 was a short-lived revolutionary government in Paris that introduced radical democratic and social reforms. It was brutally suppressed during “Bloody Week,” making it one of the fiercest class conflicts of the 19th century

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  • The Causes of the 1905 Russian Revolution: A Structural Analysis

    The Causes of the 1905 Russian Revolution: A Structural Analysis

    May 11, 2025
    Communism, USSR

    The 1905 Russian Revolution was no accident of fate—it stemmed from long-brewing social, economic, political, and military pressures. This structured analysis explores these underlying causes to reveal why Imperial Russia erupted in revolution in 1905.

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  • Britain, Germany and the Blitz

    Britain, Germany and the Blitz

    May 9, 2025
    European History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: European History

    By the start of the blitz Britain didn’t have enough anti aircraft guns, despite half a decade anticipating mass bombing as a means of war. Germany was ill prepared for the bombing of British cities as well, with its slow, light bomber lacking the speed or the payload to be able to devastate Britain in the way allied airforces would later destroy Germany.*****STOP PRESS*****I only ever talk about history on this podcast but I also have another life, yes, that of aspirant fantasy author and if th

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  • VE Day : London 1945

    VE Day : London 1945

    May 8, 2025
    Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Military History

    What was it like to experience the end of the Second World War in London, 80 years ago today? We read David Kynaston’s Austerity Britain to find out how housewives, politicians, writers and diarists experienced the end of six years of terrible conflict and what this meant to them.*****STOP PRESS*****I only ever talk about history on this podcast but I also have another life, yes, that of aspirant fantasy author and if that’s your thing you can get a copy of my debut novel The Blood of Tharta, r

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  • Nazi wartime labour shortages

    Nazi wartime labour shortages

    May 7, 2025
    European History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: European History, World War II

    At the height of the Third Reich’s war production there were nearly five million additional German and foreign workers in the war economy. Despite the efforts made by Albert Speer to rationalise the war economy and make it more efficient, there was still too few workers to compete with the combined military production of the allied powers. Workers from Germany, from occupied western countries and from allied countries like Italy and Hungary were recruited though non German workers were paid less

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  • Social change in American post war suburbia

    Social change in American post war suburbia

    May 6, 2025
    American History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: American History

    What did the good life look like in 1945? Or more to the point, what did the good life look like to white working and middle class inner city families? The answer for many was suburbia, new out-of-town developments accessed by America’s millions of new car owners who longed for space and who could be assured that people of their social, racial and often religious backgrounds would be their neighbours. Suburbia was initially intended by New Dealers to be a post war egalitarian dream for all, but

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