Conversations: What Role do Books Play in Wars? w/ Andrew Pettegree
History Shorts12 Juli 2024

Conversations: What Role do Books Play in Wars? w/ Andrew Pettegree

British author and historian Andrew Pettegree is a distinguished professor at the University of St. Andrews and an expert on the history of books and media. His extensive body of work includes titles such as "The Invention of News" and his most recent "The Book at War: How Reading Shaped Conflict and Conflict Shaped Reading,"


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Avsnitt(852)

How the 1944 Bretton Woods Conference Still Runs the World

How the 1944 Bretton Woods Conference Still Runs the World

In the summer of 1944, as World War II still raged across Europe and the Pacific, representatives from forty-four nations gathered at a secluded resort in the mountains of Bretton Woods. Their mission...

28 Juni 13min

Lights, Camera, Propaganda: Hollywood and the Cold War

Lights, Camera, Propaganda: Hollywood and the Cold War

During the Cold War, the battle between the United States and the Soviet Union wasn't fought only with missiles, spies, and armies. It was also fought on movie screens. In this episode of History Shor...

27 Juni 13min

The Black Death - A Global History of Humanity's Deadliest Pandemic, w/ Thomas Asbridge

The Black Death - A Global History of Humanity's Deadliest Pandemic, w/ Thomas Asbridge

In this powerful episode of Conversations, I sit down with leading medieval historian Professor Thomas Asbridge to discuss his groundbreaking new book, *The Black Death: A Global History of Humanity's...

26 Juni 29min

The Extraordinary History of SPAM

The Extraordinary History of SPAM

Few foods are as recognizable—or as misunderstood—as a can of SPAM. The small pink block of processed meat has been mocked, celebrated, rationed, smuggled, and even elevated to cultural icon status. B...

25 Juni 12min

How the 1964 Tokyo Olympics Rewrote Japan's Story

How the 1964 Tokyo Olympics Rewrote Japan's Story

In October 1964, the eyes of the world turned toward Tokyo. Less than twenty years after the devastation of World War II, Japan hosted the 1964 Summer Olympics—an event that was about far more than sp...

24 Juni 10min

How the Bicycle Launched the Women's Rights Movement

How the Bicycle Launched the Women's Rights Movement

In the late nineteenth century, a simple invention transformed far more than transportation. As bicycles became affordable and widely available, they offered women something many had never possessed b...

23 Juni 13min

Were the Founding Fathers Good Men? | The Historians with Joseph Ellis & Carol Berkin

Were the Founding Fathers Good Men? | The Historians with Joseph Ellis & Carol Berkin

Welcome to THE HISTORIANS — a brand new series on History Shorts where host Peter Zablocki brings together two leading historians for an unscripted, informal conversation about history's biggest quest...

22 Juni 54min

The Killer Fog: London's Great Smog of 1952

The Killer Fog: London's Great Smog of 1952

In December 1952, a thick blanket of fog descended upon London. At first, it seemed like a familiar winter nuisance. But this was no ordinary fog. Mixed with smoke from millions of coal fires and trap...

21 Juni 13min

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