49 episodes

History is not kind to the heretics. The trouble-makers, the one's who pushed back.

The goal of this podcast is to explore the lives and legends of incredible women throughout history. Sharing their stories. With wine. Cheers!

Heretic History Podcast Sarah Koerner

    • History

History is not kind to the heretics. The trouble-makers, the one's who pushed back.

The goal of this podcast is to explore the lives and legends of incredible women throughout history. Sharing their stories. With wine. Cheers!

    Episode 47: Willie Mae Thornton (Rock Me Mama)

    Episode 47: Willie Mae Thornton (Rock Me Mama)

    Before the glam of the 1980s, the funk of the 1970s, the counterculture of the 1960s, and the birth of rock & roll in the 1950s, a group of rag tag blues performers were revolutionizing the music industry. Genre blending and gender bending, they introduced a new kind of style and performance that would inspire American culture for decades to come. Their contributions have long been overlooked and many would received little in the way of compensation or recognition during their lifetimes.
     
    One of these trendsetters was a woman named Willie Mae Thornton. Born to a church going family in Alabama, she would begin her career in the industry at the tender age of 14. But she would quickly grow into one of the most tenacious and talented blues singer of her generation. Today she is considered to be a foremother of the rock & roll genre. But during her life a pernicious mixture of racism, sexism and classism would keep her mostly excluded from the limelight and fortune she was due.

    • 1 hr 27 min
    Episode 46: My IUD (A Personal Heretic History)

    Episode 46: My IUD (A Personal Heretic History)

    This month we're (I'm) doing something a little different. Due to my graduate studies, I've been somewhat limited on time to dedicate to historical research. So instead, I'm sharing a bit of my own, personal history. I want to talk about that time I got an IUD.
    In this episode, I'll be sharing my journey of getting an intrauterine device. From the research and conversations I had with my friends and doctor, to the physical experience itself, and the effects afterward.
    Maybe this is a subject you are curious to learn more about, or maybe there are some folks you might want to share this episode with. And if this topic isn't your cup of tea, no worries! Heretic History will return to its normal content next month. Cheers!
    Disclaimer: I am not a doctor. I'm just a woman telling stories from the comfort of her closet. No one should take medical advice from me.

    • 56 min
    Episode 45: Valkyries (Warriors of the Viking Age)

    Episode 45: Valkyries (Warriors of the Viking Age)

    In 1878 archeologists were conducting expansive excavations on the island of Björkö in Sweden. A millennia before, this quiet spot had been a bustling port of international trade and one of the last bastions of Norse paganism in Viking culture. As they worked, the researchers soon uncovered a massive tomb, filled with weaponry. It was the final resting place of a great warrior and military leader, whose bones (greatly degraded) were discovered in the center of the tomb.
    In an age before DNA testing, the quickest way to determine the gender of a Viking grave was by observing the items contained in the tomb. Jewelry = the tomb of a woman and weapons = the tomb of a man (or warrior). In 1878 and for over a century afterward, it was taken for granted that the great warrior in Björkö was a man. Until a new study and DNA testing were undertaken in 2017... the results of which, would turn our assumptions of the Viking world on its head.

    • 1 hr 33 min
    Episode 44: Mary "Rose" Tudor (Hey Little Sister)

    Episode 44: Mary "Rose" Tudor (Hey Little Sister)

    The Tudors may be one of Western history's most well-known families. Their real-life traumas, dramas, and intrigues still inspire plot lines in popular media today. One of the often overlooked members of this family is Mary Tudor, the youngest daughter of Henry VII.
    Although her story has been the inspiration for many a romance novel (she famously married for love rather than power) these fanciful tales fail to capture the character of the real woman. Mary Tudor was more than a swooning damsel. She was self-assured, determined, and fiercely loyal to those she loved. She may have also been the only person in England who would dare to defy the fearsome Henry VIII, her dearest big brother.

    • 1 hr 53 min
    Episode 43: Boudica (Destruction Horizon)

    Episode 43: Boudica (Destruction Horizon)

    Another release from the Patreon vault!
    At its height, the Roman Empire stretched across the regions of what today makes up most of Western Europe, portions of Eastern Europe and West Asia, down into the Middle East, and across northern Africa. And at the farthest western reach of that great Empire was the island of Britannia.
    But in 60/61 CE, the unquestionable might of Rome was nearly upended by a band of rebellious tribes at the edge of the empire. This violent uprising would leave three Roman cities in ruins and thousands dead. The rebellion was eventually quashed, its leaders annihilated, and considering the war lasted one year, it should have been only a footnote in history. Instead, it captured the attention and imagination of chroniclers, rulers and historians across the world and down the generations.
    In part because this fierce and bloody rebellion was led by a woman: Boudica, Queen of the Iceni. Her name and her life have become the stuff of legends.
    TW: Discussion of SA

    • 1 hr 17 min
    Episode 42: Rosa Parks (After Montgomery)

    Episode 42: Rosa Parks (After Montgomery)

    Something a little different for you this month... I'm releasing what was originally my first Patreon-exclusive episode, Rosa Parks P3. If you need a refresher on Parts 1 and 2, just scroll back to 2022 and give those episodes a listen. Otherwise, let's dive into the conclusion of this incredible story:
    The name Rosa Parks will be forever linked to the early years of the American Civil Rights Movement, particularly in the Deep South.  But she would spend more than half of her life living in Detroit, fighting against the racist policies and oppressive systems that were often overlooked and downplayed in the North.
    In the decade following WW2 Parks, like many other African Americans, would flee racial violence in the South. Heading north, searching for the opportunity of a better way of life. What many of them would find was the same systems of segregation and degradation they had hoped to leave behind.
    Rosa would refer to Detroit as "The northern promised land that wasn't." But she would meet these challenges head-on, with the same grit and quiet determination that had made her famous in Montgomery.

    • 1 hr 30 min

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