5 episodes

Podcast by We Go Way Back

We Go Way Back We Go Way Back

    • History
    • 5.0 • 11 Ratings

Podcast by We Go Way Back

    Dr Harold Moody and the 1930s UK civil rights movement

    Dr Harold Moody and the 1930s UK civil rights movement

    Kit is joined by Stephen Bourne, a historian of Black British history, to discuss Dr Harold Moody and his creation of the League of Coloured Peoples.

    The League was a British civil rights organisation founded in London in 1931. Dr Moody, the League's creator, had arrived in the UK from Jamaica thirty years before to study medicine at King's College London.

    Dr Moody founded the League to push for racial equality and civil rights in the UK and is, therefore, an integral figure in 20th-century British history.

    • 29 min
    Marine Le Pen, the face of far-right politics in France

    Marine Le Pen, the face of far-right politics in France

    12 months from the 2022 French presidential election, Marine Le Pen, the leader of France's far-right party the National Rally, is leading the sitting president Emanuel Macron in the polls.

    Le Pen is an ultra-conservative nationalist who blames almost all of France's problems on globalisation, immigration and Islam. Her party is a hotbed for xenophobic and racist attitudes.

    But who is this politician? Where did she come from? And, what events helped form these attitudes?

    To answer these questions, Tom speaks with Professor Cécile Alduy from Stanford University in California.

    Cécile Alduy is a professor of contemporary French politics, with expertise on the far-right as they relate to the question of French identity.

    In 2015, Alduy published a book in which she analysed the way Marine Le Pen uses language to broaden her party's support, helping her become the most popular politician in France today.

    • 29 min
    Neo-Nazis, a US village and the meaning of free speech

    Neo-Nazis, a US village and the meaning of free speech

    In an era when the bounds of free speech seem to be a constant topic of debate, We Go Way Back examined an episode from the 1970s that tested the limits of the US Constitution.

    Kit speaks to Professor Philippa Strum, Global Fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, about the time neo-Nazis tried to hold a demonstration in a small US town of Holocaust survivors - and the liberal free speech advocates who came to the Nazis' defence.

    • 29 min
    King, warrior and statesman: the story of Cetshwayo KaMpande

    King, warrior and statesman: the story of Cetshwayo KaMpande

    In this episode, We Go Way Back brings to life the amazing story of Cetshwayo KaMpande. To do so, Tom speaks with Dr. T.J. Tallie, an assistant professor of African History at the University of San Diego in California.

    Cetshwayo became King of the independent African state of Zululand in 1873 and the episode follows his gripping story covering an incredible victory over colonial British forces, painful losses, imprisonment, and a high-profile trip to London in 1882. Ultimately, this is a profile of a man who traversed class dynamics, racial attitudes and gender norms in a time of strict social hierarchies.

    Dr. Tallie's research is focused on the history of Southern Africa and he is the author of 'Queering Colonial Natal: Indigeneity and the Violence of Belonging in Southern Africa'. He's an expert on this topic, an important voice to listen to, and an incredibly fun interviewee.

    • 31 min
    The Dyatlov Pass Tragedy

    The Dyatlov Pass Tragedy

    In 1959 nine people died in a mysterious mountaineering incident in Soviet Russia that continues to confound and intrigue onlookers.

    A recent Russian investigation determined that an avalanche probably led to the mountaineers' deaths, but some are still not convinced.

    Among the doubters is Teodora Hadjiyska, a long standing Dyatlov Pass researcher, whose new book Height 1079 details her theory of the events of February 1959.

    • 29 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
11 Ratings

11 Ratings

Benji Singh ,

Great podcast- interesting and engaging

Great podcast and interviews with very interesting people. Great podcast for learning and better understanding important historical and current events.

Great job guys

Victor Raber ,

Watch this space!

Relevant, thought-provoking and expert speakers combined with a concise format renders this podcast a fascinating 30mins of audio every week.
The political, economic, social and cultural effects of the virus will be profound, but not “unprecedented” as I learnt from ep2: history can help us to understand how we got here and where we might be going, yet it seems to be somewhat overlooked in the media.
This podcasts plugs that gap with a great format and young, balanced interviewers.

Ps just one thing...who are you guys?!

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