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Explaining History Podcast

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Explaining History Podcast

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Podcast

July 10, 2025
/ Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Political History, Political History
  • Maoist struggle sessions and the Cultural Revolution

    Maoist struggle sessions and the Cultural Revolution

    July 10, 2025
    Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Political History, Political History

    This episode draws from the excellent book Red Memory by Tania Brannigan, an oral history of the Cultural Revolution. Here we examine the role of thought, how Mao sought to stimulate public thought during the Hundred Flowers Campaign of the late 1950s to seek out enemies and how struggle sessions were a form of thought torture, making ones own self unbearable. *****STOP PRESS*****I only ever talk about history on this podcast but I also have another life, yes, that of aspirant fantasy author and

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  • Violeta Parra: Chile’s Folk Revolutionary, Cold-War Exile & Mother of Nueva Canción

    Violeta Parra: Chile’s Folk Revolutionary, Cold-War Exile & Mother of Nueva Canción

    July 9, 2025
    American History, Cold War, European History, Military History, Podcast, Podcast: American History, Political History

    ***PLEASE LISTEN TO THE END***Chilean folk icon Violeta Parra (1917-1967) was far more than the singer of “Gracias a la Vida.” In this episode, Erica Verba—Director of Latin American Studies at Cal State LA—reveals how Parra transformed from teenage street-busker and RCA-Victor recording artist into the archivist, painter and political catalyst who ignited Latin America’s Nueva Canción movement.We trace her itinerant childhood with the “Circo Pobre,” her reinvention as a self-taught ethnomusico

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  • Post war lesbian life in Britain

    Post war lesbian life in Britain

    July 9, 2025
    Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Military History, Social & Cultural History, World War II

    Join us on The Explaining History Podcast as we welcome Dame Vikki Heywood, former Executive Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Royal Court Theatre, to discuss her dazzling debut novel Miss Veal and Miss Ham. Set against the sleepy veneer of a 1951 Buckinghamshire village post office, this intimate tale reveals the hidden passions and unspoken resilience of two women whose lives span from the suffragette movement to the aftermath of World War II.In this episode, we explore:A Day o

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  • Edwardian Britain’s most famous fraudster

    Edwardian Britain’s most famous fraudster

    July 9, 2025
    Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Political History, Political History, Social & Cultural History

    Join us on The Explaining History Podcast as we sit down with historian and author Mark Bridgeman to unravel the extraordinary life—and daring deceptions—of Violet Charlesworth, Britain’s first notorious female fraudster. In his landmark new book, Nothing for Something, Bridgeman spent three years mining court records, witness statements, private archives, and first-hand site visits to reconstruct a scandal that captivated Edwardian Britain.Violet Charlesworth, before her 25th birthday, bilked a

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  • Oligarchy in America and Russia

    Oligarchy in America and Russia

    July 8, 2025
    American History, Cold War, European History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Modern History

    At the end of the 20th Century, the Cold War which had defined the struggle between various different iterations of capitalism in the western world and the USSR in the east was replaced by a slow oligarchic coup. An equivalent class has come to power in both countries and has similar imperatives, to occupy the state and cannibalise society. This podcast explores the material and ideological conditions that led to this takeover. *****STOP PRESS*****I only ever talk about history on this podcast b

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  • Trump’s ICE brownshirts, an historical analysis

    Trump’s ICE brownshirts, an historical analysis

    July 7, 2025
    American History, European History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: European History, Trump

    Nazism sought to bypass legal norms where it couldn’t just sweep them aside. The German Weimar constitution took time to dismantle and new institutions, practices and laws needed to be created in order to subvert it. A similar process is underway in America at the moment and Trump’s recent allocation of over $200 billion to ICE is a huge step towards cementing a police state that is answerable directly to him. Today we explore the comparisons between Trumpism and Nazism where they are most evide

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  • Bowie and the 1960s

    Bowie and the 1960s

    July 4, 2025
    European History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Social & Cultural History, Social & Cultural History

    In this episode of Explaining History, we dive into the fascinating world of David Bowie’s 1960s—a decade of shifting cultural currents, personal reinvention, and the search for identity that would shape one of the most iconic artists of the 20th century.Drawing on Neil Stephenson’s insightful book David Bowie, we explore how the social upheavals of the 60s—from Swinging London and Mod culture to the countercultural movements and sexual liberation—created a crucible in which Bowie experimented w

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  • British spies in Mesopotamia – 1915

    British spies in Mesopotamia – 1915

    July 3, 2025
    Asian History, European History, Middle Eastern History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: European History, Political History

    This episode explores part of the story of St John Philby, father to Kim and eventually advisor to King Ibn Saud. Philby was one of the few administrators that the British government and its colonial government in India could find who understood Arabia and Mesopotamia. In 1915 as British fortunes against the Ottoman Empire took a turn for the worst, Philby was sent to Basra to reorganise the city’s finances after the retreat of the Turks. He would eventually help to organise the financial admini

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  • Literary tastes, readers and book clubs in the inter war period

    Literary tastes, readers and book clubs in the inter war period

    July 2, 2025
    Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Modern History, Social & Cultural History

    In the first decades of the 20th Century, a growth in literacy and the availability of paperback and hardback books created a culture of mass participation on literary reading that was unprecedented. Nicola Wilson’s new book Recommended, a history of the Book Society, tells the story of Hugh Walpole, JB Priestley and Cecil Day Lewis amongst others and how they created the first mass book club which sent monthly recommendations to lower middle class and working class readers. Here we hear from Ni

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  • Austerity Britain 2010 – 2025

    Austerity Britain 2010 – 2025

    July 2, 2025
    Economic History, European History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: European History, Political History

    The project to permanently shrink the British state and to inflict mass hardship on the most vulnerable which was commenced after 2010 has cost untold numbers of lives. The last calculations put the dead at around 338,000 people but it is likely now to be far higher and Britain has exchanged one austerity government for another. Now the Labour Party continues the brutal economic assault on the poor, the unwell and the disabled that the previous Conservative administrations had commenced. Today I

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