
58本のエピソード

Banjo Strings and Drinking Gourds: How American Culture Came to Be Frontier Culture Museum of Virginia
-
- 歴史
Podcast of the Frontier Culture Museum of Virginia.
Episodes cover specific historical topics, like medicine, architecture, or art, but also provide a behind-the-scenes look at a living history museum. For more on each episode, visit our Wordpress: www.banjostringsanddrinkinggourds.wordpress.com!
Visit us at www.frontiermuseum.org, on Facebook, YouTube, or Instagram
-
Immigration in Their Words
Have you ever wondered just how the interpreters at the Frontier Culture Museum are able to talk about the why and how people left their homes for America? In this podcast, we talk about, and read from, primary sources about immigration. Letters, diaries, memoirs and more provide a detailed look into not only the push/pull factors behind the decision to leave Europe, or indeed return home, but also the fierce propaganda wars that were being waged. Accounts from enslaved persons provide a counterpoint to the relative luxury of choice the Europeans had in deciding whether or not to relocate to the colonies.
Intro Music: Zac Bell
Transition Music: Johann Sebastian Bach, Italian Concerto BWV. 971. 2 Andante
Exit Music: Jean Claude Hatungimana -
The Pox that Changed Medicine
Smallpox is no joke. Having just experienced a world-wide pandemic of a virulent virus, we have a little more inkling about what people in the past faced with smallpox, but nowhere near on the same scale. Smallpox, while eradicated as an infectious agent at large, remains one of the deadliest diseases yet known. In this episode our guest, Lucy Abell, discusses just how dreadful smallpox was to historic populations, but also how smallpox was the inspiration behind our modern understanding of infections and vaccines.
Intro Music: Zac Bell
Transition Music: Saint-Saens, Danse Macabre Op. 20, The University of Chicago Orchestra
Exit Music: Jean Claude Hatungimana -
Behind the Scenes: Making Clothing
Today's episode takes you behind the scenes to our Costume Shop where our Costume Coordinator, Sam McGinty, researches, organizes, and produces the historically accurate clothing interpreters wear on site. Helping him are typically a quartet of interpreters who are familiar with or learning about hand sewing in a historic manner. Today, they discuss their current projects, how they produce garments for the interpreters, and their worst sewing mistake ever.
Intro Music: Zac Bell
Exit Music: Jean Claude Hatungimana
Cover Art: Emily Noble Day -
Hoaxes in History
Happy April Fool's Day! In this episode, we treat you to some of the most infamous pranks and hoaxes in history. Everyone enjoys pulling the wool over someone's eyes and some of these notorious pranks and pranksters achieved heights of greatness most of us can only aspire to.
Intro Music: Zac Bell
Transition Music: Mozart, Sonata KV 331 Rondo alla turca, Markus Staab
Exit Music: Jean Claude Hatungimana
Cover Art: Emily Noble Day -
Wordplay: Puns, Riddles, and Slang
How many times have you stopped a conversation to either groan at or admire a pun? We all drop inadvertent puns into conversation. Sometimes we don't even catch them. Wordplay has been around as long as there has been language, but English really seems to lend itself to sly wit. In this episode, we discuss the rise and fall of the much maligned pun, playing with logic for riddles, and the advent of slang.
Intro Music: Zac Bell
Transition Music: Saint-Saens, The Carnival of The Animals- XIV. Finale, Seattle Youth Orchestra
Exit Music: Jean Claude Hatungimana
Cover Art: Emily Noble Day -
Coffee, Tea, and Chocolate
We all have our routines, whether it be to grab a cup of coffee on the way to work or indulge in a cup of tea in the afternoon. The luxury of our choices was surprisingly the same for colonial Americans. In this episode, we discuss the availability, popularity, and social context of each of the main non-alcoholic drinks of the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries. You might be surprised by some of it!
Intro Music: Zac Bell
Transition Music: Georg Phillip Telemann, Trio Sonata for Flutes and Piano in A Minor, II-Allegro
Exit Music: Jean Claude Hatungimana
Cover Art: Emily Noble Day