145 episodes

15 Minute History is a podcast series is devoted to short, accessible discussions of important topics in World History and US History. The discussions will be conducted by the award winning faculty and graduate students at the University of Texas at Austin.

15 Minute History 15 Minute History

    • Society & Culture

15 Minute History is a podcast series is devoted to short, accessible discussions of important topics in World History and US History. The discussions will be conducted by the award winning faculty and graduate students at the University of Texas at Austin.

    Episode 146: Black Labor in Boston

    Episode 146: Black Labor in Boston

    The historian Henry Adams once wrote that, “the American boy of 1854 stood nearer the year 1 than to the year 1900.” Changes during that period were indeed profound in Adam’s home town of Boston. And yet, for the majority of the city’s black men and women, life and work in 1900 were not that […]

    • 28 min
    Episode 145: Student Protests

    Episode 145: Student Protests

    Over the course of the academic year, student protests have roiled college campuses like at no other time in recent memory. Going further back though, historians see plenty of parallels — as well as some key differences — with student protest movements focused on Vietnam (1960s/70s) and South Africa (1980s/90s.) Today we’re joined today by […]

    • 25 min
    Episode 144: Partisanship in the Revolutionary era

    Episode 144: Partisanship in the Revolutionary era

    Political partisanship is not only a hallmark of US democracy today. There is also a long history of dysfunction and division as old as America. H.W. Brands’s new book, Founding Partisans is a revelatory history of the Revolutionary era’s stormy politics, which includes a look at the nation’s earliest political parties — those of Hamilton and […]

    • 22 min
    Episode 143: Glen Canyon and Water Infrastructure

    Episode 143: Glen Canyon and Water Infrastructure

    Climate change and population growth is creating a new appreciation — and anxiety — around water infrastructure, both in the western United States and around the world. We’re joined today by Professor Erika Bsumek, whose new book, The Foundations of Glen Canyon, focuses on America’s  second highest concrete-arch dam. Not simply a massive piece of physical infrastructure it is also […]

    • 16 min
    Episode 142: World War I and the Hapsburg Empire

    Episode 142: World War I and the Hapsburg Empire

    The Hapsburg Empire was founded in 1282 (or 1526, depending on who you ask) and lasted until 1918. Despite its increasingly antiquated and illiberal tendencies, it survived the reformation, the thirty years war, the enlightenment, the age of Revolution, the revolutions of 1848,  and the Austro-Prussian war of 1866 — but not World War I. […]

    • 16 min
    Episode 141: Reconstruction From Past to Present

    Episode 141: Reconstruction From Past to Present

    In the wake of the Civil War, the Reconstruction Era emerged as a time of radical change in the 19th century United States. Dr. Peniel Joseph brings this conversation into the 20th and 21st centuries as we discuss his most recent book, The Third Reconstruction: America’s Struggle for Racial Justice in the Twenty-First Century.

    • 16 min

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