Explaining History Podcast

Category: Podcast: Asian History

Explaining History Podcast

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Podcast: Asian History

September 25, 2025
/ Asian History, Economic History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Asian History, Political History
  • Uzbekistan and Central Asia in transition

    Uzbekistan and Central Asia in transition

    September 25, 2025
    Asian History, Economic History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Asian History, Political History

    Unveiling Uzbekistan: A Nation at the Crossroads of History and FutureJoin host Nick as he welcomes back acclaimed journalist and author Joanna Lillis to the Explaining History podcast. Seven years after her last appearance to discuss her book on Kazakhstan, “Dark Shadows,” Joanna returns to shed light on the enigmatic nation of Uzbekistan, the subject of her new book, “Silk Mirage.”This episode delves into the complexities of a country that was, for 25 years, one of the world’s most brutal dict

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  • Carter, Reagan, Bush and China

    Carter, Reagan, Bush and China

    May 25, 2025
    American History, Asian History, Economic History, European History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Asian History

    From the late 1970s onwards China and the USSR were on two very different historical paths and three US presidents, Carter, Reagan and Bush sought to harness the potential of the world’s most populous country as it rapidly became wealthier. China, often cited as having embraced capitalism after Mao, abandoned inward looking autarchy and opened its economy up in the 1980s to foreign trade and investment. In the 1990s and 2000s there would be an explosion of offshoring that has partially created t

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  • China after Deng (Part One)

    China after Deng (Part One)

    May 19, 2025
    Asian History, Economic History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Asian History

    Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao are often overlooked but pivotal figures in recent Chinese history whose role in steering China through its extraordinary economic transformation in the 1990s and 2000s is overshadowed by Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping. This is the first in a series of podcasts about these two figures and how they created the China now ruled by Xi Jinping.*****STOP PRESS*****I only ever talk about history on this podcast but I also have another life, yes, that of aspirant fantasy author a

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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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  • China’s Neoliberal Turn 1978-89

    China’s Neoliberal Turn 1978-89

    March 13, 2025
    Asian History, Economic History, European History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Asian History

    How did China embrace its own hybrid form of market capitalism with state control after the death of Mao in 1976? How did China avoid the economic shock therapy that devastated the USSR and become a technological super power in the 21st Century? Today’s podcast explores the writings of David Harvey on Chinese capitalism and communism.Help the podcast to continue bringing you history each weekIf you enjoy the Explaining History podcast and its many years of content and would like to help the show

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  • China, Japan and the legacy of the Nanjing Massacre

    China, Japan and the legacy of the Nanjing Massacre

    October 24, 2024
    Asian History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Asian History

    Between December 1937 and January 1938 on of the great crimes of Japan’s war against China occurred at the Chinese capital of Nanjing. Determined to break Chiang Kai Shek’s nationalist forces, the Japanese murdered tens of thousands of captured soldiers and proceeded to slaughter the civilian population. The Japanese army went of the rampage, killing children and raping the city’s female population. In 1985 a permanent memorial hall to the horrors inflicted on the city and on China by Japan was

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  • The Nanjing Massacre 1937-38 (Part One)

    The Nanjing Massacre 1937-38 (Part One)

    May 17, 2022
    American History, Asian History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Asian History

    In the winter of 1937-38, Japan launched an assault of previously unprecedented brutality against a Chinese civilian population in the nationalist capital of Nanjing. Japan’s desigs for China and South East Asia rested on being able to break the power of China’s Guomindang nationalists, who were more inclined to build alliances with European powers or America. The Japanese invaders wanted China to be reoriented towards Japan as the power that would lead China along with the rest of Asia. A symbo

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  • Chiang Kai Shek and war with Japan – 1937 (Part Two)

    Chiang Kai Shek and war with Japan – 1937 (Part Two)

    April 25, 2022
    Age of Exploration, Asian History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Asian History

    Part two of today’s exploration of Chiang Kai Shek’s decision making in the summer of 1937 as Japan’s armies placed ever greater pressure on northern China.Explaining History helps you understand the 20th Century through critical conversations and expert interviews. We connect the past to the present. If you enjoy the show, please subscribe and share.▸ Support the Show & Get Exclusive ContentBecome a Patron: patreon.com/explaininghistory▸ Join the Community & Continue the ConversationFacebook Gr

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  • Chiang Kai Shek and war with Japan – 1937 (Part One)

    Chiang Kai Shek and war with Japan – 1937 (Part One)

    April 25, 2022
    American History, Asian History, European History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Asian History

    After six years of Japanese control of Manchuria, and the establishment of control piecemeal across northern China, a skirmish at the Marco Polo bridge near Beijing presented Chiang with a fateful decision, to wage war now against Japan to prevent China further weakening or to ignore the crisis. Chiang knew that China would be forced to fight alone, as there would be no help forthcoming from embattled European democracies or the USA. Nationalist Chinese troops had developed under the tutelage of

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  • China, the Second World War and historical memory (Part Two)

    China, the Second World War and historical memory (Part Two)

    February 8, 2022
    American History, Asian History, European History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Asian History

    China, in the British or American historical memory of the Second World War is rarely seen as an equal allied power, despite the huge sacrifices endured by the Chinese people during the conflict. This is the second part of a series of podcasts based on the work of Dr Rana Mitter, which re-examines China’s wartime role and origins and causes of Japan’s brutal invasion in 1937.Explaining History helps you understand the 20th Century through critical conversations and expert interviews. We connect

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