Thursday, June 18, 2009

The latest in New Books in History

I am just barely keeping up with New Books In History. Every week a new interview with authors come out and there is still a considerable backlog I'd love to look in to. At least with the new ones I am done, although I haven't had the time to report on that. So, once more, here is a combined review of three episodes in this fine podcast.

In Becoming Historians Marshal Poe interviews the authors and historians James Banner and John Gillis. They discuss their book about the way the established names became historians. It turns into a comparison game between those historians, including Banner and Gillis and the generation of Marshall Poe and the fundamental differences in atmosphere and environment in which they became historians and mad a career as such (or failed to do so). Inevitably this is also implicitly a talk about how academia has developed, for better or worse, over the past decades.

Rebels Rising is a book by Benjamin Carp about the places where the American Revolution was concocted. This was in bars, but also in churches, markets and even in people's homes. Marshal Poe speaks with Carp.

The Frankfurter Schule surely was an important name when I studied sociology. It never occurred to me though that these people went in exile and after the war only some of them returned to Germany, making this in part American, in part a German phenomenon. Thomas Wheatland wrote a book about the Frankfurt School in Exile and tells Marshal Poe, he actually prefers to speak of the Horkheimer circle. And more: the desertion of Fromm and the misgivings of Marcuse and Adorno. A must listen.

More NBIH:
Three recommendations,
American Exceptionalism,
The Great War in short,
How Rome Fell,
Glancing over the backlog.

Environmental History Vodcast

A visual brother to the Exploring Environmental History Podcast is the Environmental History Videocast (feed) Jan Oosthoek introduces us to the themes of environmental history. And, in the first of the series, an answer to the ever returning question 'What is environmental history'



Source: Environmental History Resources

NOTE: This vodcast is not fit for viewing on iPod.

More Environmental History:
Defining Environmental History,
Natural Disasters,
Canada and New Zealand,
Environmental history,
Climate Change in recent history.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Noam Chomsky on Media Matters

The news podcast Media Matters, with Bob McChesney featured Noam Chomsky and his views that are not exactly middle of the road in the US.

Even though I do not agree with all of what Chomsky says, I find it refreshing to hear him. His cynicism about Israel is something one needs to hear, I think. If one applies a similar kind of cynicism to the Arab world, or to Hamas and Hezbollah the conclusions may be different.

That is where Chomsky, I feel, derails himself. You cannot help but feel in his remarks a subtext of praise for the regimes in Cuba and Venezuela and so the strongest element in his words are those of self-criticism. He rips off the mask of the diplomacy jargon and regular terminology in which the US and Israeli positions are usually portrayed. His words are to be kept in mind as a balance.

More Media Matters:
Juan Cole,
The Crisis.

The Augustan Age - IOT

Here is a quick hint towards BBC's In Our Time before the latest program will be taken out of the feed. I know many of you history podcast listeners out there are interested in Roman History. Well, here is one episode you must download from the feed before tomorrow and listen to: The Augustan Age.

When Octavius became the leader of Rome, he changed his name to Augustus and became the first emperor. This started not only the era of Rome as an Empire it also meant the beginning of immense cultural flourishing. Rome was rebuilt, Rome was reinvented and world history took a definite turn.

More Roman History:
Why did Rome fall?,
Carthage (In Our Time and others),
The Punic Wars (Dan Carlin's hardcore History),
Tacitus (In Our Time),
Roman History in Podcasts.

There is also an Open University vodcast about Roman History, that I have not reviewed (yet).

More In Our Time:
The trial of king Charles I,
St. Paul,
Whale evolution,
Magna Carta,
BBC's In Our Time - always recommended.

A crisis of authority in Iran - The Economist podcast

Ali Ansari speaks on The Economist Podcast about the Iranian Elections and the ensuing unrest.



The bottom-line is: this is not an unrest that is going to throw over the government, but it is a strong signal to the rulers it cannot mess with the people. It tells also the outside world, Iran is much more diverse that usually assumed.

More from The Economist:
Comfort with Obama,
Democracy in America - podcast review,
Issues of Race,
The primary system,
The Economist in New Hampshire.

More Iran:
The Iranian Elections - KQED Forum,
Iran Today - LSE podcast,
Iran in 2009 - UChannel Podcast,
Iran Podcast,
Iran - to strike or not to strike.

Aaf Brandt Corstius - Simek 's Nachts

In Elseviers versie van Simek 's Nachts was de vriendin van Gijs Groenteman te gast. Op de RVU hadden we al de moeder van Gijs gehad. Voor wie het nog niet wist, Gijs Groenteman is een van de langstmeelopende redacteuren van Simek 's Nachts. Het zette Martin in een lastig parket.

Maar Martin Simek, zou Simek niet zijn als hij niet toch nog met Aaf Brandt Corstius een prima gesprek zou hebben. Aan het eind ropet hij dat het te klef wordt en al daarvoor had ik het gevoel dat hij niet goed wist wat te vragen. In wezen komt het er op neer dat hij zijn gaste de resultaten van eerdere interviews voorhoudt en daarop laat reageren.

Vanuit het perspectief van professionaliteit en originaliteit is daar natuurlijk van alles op aan te merken, maar Aaf Brandt Corstius gaat vrolijk mee en praat gemoedelijk en openhartig. Zo wordt het een leuke uitzending met de nodige primeurs. Simek zal het er moeilijk mee gehad hebben, maar het resultaat zal de luisteraar bevallen en daar gaat het ten slotte om niet waar?

Overigens, Simek heeft een afvloeiïngsregeling bij de RVU gekregen. Er moest wel een rechter aan te pas komen. En passant leren we dat hij 1000 Euro per interview ontving. Niet slecht zou ik zeggen. (bron: Volkskrant)

Meer Simek 's Nachts:
Freek de Jonge,
Kees van Kooten,
Connie Palmen,
Dhyan Sutorius (RVU),
Louis Tas (RVU).