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Pod-Textualizing the Past is a podcast that explores U.S. history from pre-colonization through the U.S. Civil War. Produced at the University of Texas at El Paso, Professor Susan Stanfield talks with experts about specific aspects of U.S. history and their cultural impact.
Episodes
Friday Aug 07, 2020
Episode 15: Slavery in New England
Friday Aug 07, 2020
Friday Aug 07, 2020
Dr. Christy Clark-Pujara, (Associate Professor, Afro-American Studies at the University of Wisconsin) discusses slavery in New England in this podcast. Although we typically think about slavery as being a story of the American South, Dr. Clark-Pujara dispels that myth and explains how northern states profited from slave labor. She is the author of Dark Work: The Business of Slavery in Rhode Island.
Friday Jul 10, 2020
Episode 14: Alexander Hamilton: More than a Song and a Dance
Friday Jul 10, 2020
Friday Jul 10, 2020
Janalyn Moss (History Librarian at the University of Iowa) talks to us about the man, the musical and the world of Alexander Hamilton. By contextualizing the musical, this discussion examines how “Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story,” shapes our understanding of Hamilton and the Revolutionary era. This episode includes short excerpts from the musical and is intended for educational purposes only.
Fair Use Notice: This episode of the Pod-textualizing the Past contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner.We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of history and politics in an educational setting. We believe this constitutes a fair use of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material in this podcast episode is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.If you wish to use copyrighted material from this podcast for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.Last updated: July 10, 2020
Friday Jul 03, 2020
Episode 13: Cooking an American Identity
Friday Jul 03, 2020
Friday Jul 03, 2020
Rachel Snell (Ph.D. History, University of Maine) studies food and food writing as a way to understand the lived experience of early American women. Focused on the 18th Century, this interview examines women’s kitchen labor, Amelia Simmons, author of the first American cookbook, and the ritual of baking Election Cake.
Friday Jun 26, 2020
Episode 12: Female Soldiers in the American Revolution
Friday Jun 26, 2020
Friday Jun 26, 2020
Lindsay Reinpold (History-UTEP), a recent graduate of the MA program at UTEP and middle school history teacher discusses female soldiers in the American Revolution. Her study of Elizabeth Zane, Margaret Cochran Corbin, and Deborah Sampson uncovers details of their lives and service while providing analysis of the influence of gender norms during the revolution and these women’s lives afterward.
Friday Jun 19, 2020
Episode 11: Charlotte Forten: Radical, Teenaged, Abolitionist
Friday Jun 19, 2020
Friday Jun 19, 2020
Dr. Kristen Hillaire Glasgow (Ph.D. History, U.C.L.A.) discusses Charlotte Forten, a young woman of color in the 1850s who is an anti-slavery activist. Using Forten’s diary of her teenaged years as a focal point, Glasgow examines her thoughts and perspective shedding new light on the abolition movement.
Thursday Jun 11, 2020
Episode Ten: Sickness and Health in British North America
Thursday Jun 11, 2020
Thursday Jun 11, 2020
Dr. Angela Keysor (Allegheny College, History) examines illness and its treatment during the eighteenth Century in British North America, with a particular focus on smallpox epidemics. As we experience a pandemic in the twenty-first century, how different was the colonial American experience and it what ways is it the same.
Thursday Jun 11, 2020
Episode Nine: African American Soldiers and the Families’ Civil War
Thursday Jun 11, 2020
Thursday Jun 11, 2020
Dr. Holly Pinheiro (Augusta University, History) discusses the impact of the Civil War on African American soldiers and their families based on his forthcoming book from the University of Georgia Press. Dr. Pinheiro examines why men enlisted, how they were treated, and the ways their service shaped families during the war and beyond.
Monday Apr 27, 2020
Episode Eight: Marbury v. Madison and the U.S. Supreme Court
Monday Apr 27, 2020
Monday Apr 27, 2020
Dr. Timothy Johnson (University of Minnesota, Political Science) is interviewed about the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Marbury v. Madison(1803). Beyond the significance of Judicial Review, the legal doctrine established in this decision, Johnson describes the development of the Court during the early republic and explains the politics behind this decision.
Monday Jun 17, 2019
Monday Jun 17, 2019
Robert Diaz (UTEP-History) is interviewed about how the war with Mexico was experienced in the El Paso area as well as the fluidity of borders both at the time of this war and in more recent history. The Battle of Brazito is also discussed.
Monday Jun 17, 2019
Episode Six: Politics, Protest & the War with Mexico
Monday Jun 17, 2019
Monday Jun 17, 2019
Dr. Brad Cartwright (UTEP-History) is interviewed about the political controversy over the Mexico-U.S. War, how the war was protested, and the lasting impact of this war.