Talking History

KSMU Radio

Talking History is a radio program and podcast created by KSMU Ozarks Public Radio in association with the Missouri State University Department of History. Each month, hosts Djene Bajalan and Patrick Needham speak with historians and scholars about the ideas, people, and events that have shaped our world. Talking History airs on KSMU 91.1 FM the first Thursday of each month at 12:06 pm CT.

  1. May 7

    The history of queer activism, community and struggle in the Midwest with Stuart Hinds

    This month Djene and Patrick speak with Stuart Hinds, Curator of Special Collections and Archives at the Miller Nichols Library, about the Gay and Lesbian Archive of Mid-America. When people think about queer history in the United States, they often think first of places like New York or San Francisco. But the history of queer activism, community and struggle was never confined to the coasts. It was also made in places like Kansas City and Springfield, in local organizations, in political campaigns, in community spaces, and in the archives that preserve those lives and stories. Recovering that history helps us see that queer history is not some marginal side note to the American past. It is part of the history of citizenship, rights, community, and social change in the United States.  To learn more about this history, Djene and Patrick speak with Stuart Hinds, Curator of Special Collections and Archives at the Miller Nichols Library, about his work as the Curator of the Gay and Lesbian Archive of Mid-America (GLAMA). Stuart Hinds is Curator of Special Collections and Archives at the Miller Nichols Library at the University of Missouri–Kansas City. He also serves as Curator of the Gay and Lesbian Archive of Mid-America, a collecting initiative he co-founded in 2010 to preserve and make accessible the history of Kansas City’s LGBT communities. Stuart has spoken widely on topics related to queer history and archives, co-taught the first course on U.S. gay and lesbian history at UMKC, and is currently working on a book titled Cowtown Queers: A History of Gay and Lesbian Kansas City.

    26 min
  2. Mar 5

    Bombing Hitler's Hometown with Mike Croissant

    On a cold April morning in 1945, nearly five thousand young American airmen climbed into B-17s and B-24s on dusty airfields in southern Italy. A few hours later, they were flying through a sky turned black with flak over Linz, Austria, Hitler’s adopted hometown, the city he dreamed of remaking into the cultural capital of his empire. For the men in those bombers, it was supposed to be one of the last missions of the war, maybe the last. None of them wanted to die with peace so close. But as they flew toward those sprawling rail yards along the Danube, they entered what one gunner later called “a man-made hell”, crippled aircraft tumbling from formation, parachutes blossoming over enemy territory, and, below, Austrian civilians running for shelter as the bombs fell. Some of those airmen ended up as POWs. Some were marched into the gates of Mauthausen. Others fell into Soviet hands and discovered that being “liberated” could also mean being beaten and interrogated as suspected spies. Many survived, but came home with memories they locked away for decades. To talk about this operation, Djene speaks with Mike Croissant, author of a new book on the topic, Bombing Hitler’s Hometown: The Untold Story of the Last Mass Bomber Raid of World War II in Europe, published in 2024 by Citadel Press. Mike Croissant is a retired CIA officer who served for more than 20 years as an analyst and counterterrorism targeting officer in locations ranging from Washington, DC, to the Middle East and Central and South Asia. Upon retirement, he received the CIA’s Career Commendation Medal for meritorious service. He holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Illinois and graduate degrees from Indiana University and Missouri State University.

    28 min
  3. Jan 1

    Iran’s women, life and freedom movement with Fatemeh Jamalpour

    In the autumn of 2022, Iran was rocked by a wave of national, popular unrest, some of the most severe in recent years. The immediate cause of the revolt was the suspicious death of an Iranian Kurdish woman, Mahsa Jîna Amini, whilst in the custody of the Tehran police. Amini’s death proved to be a lightning rod for discontent directed at the Islamist government in Iran, which took power after the 1979 revolution. Significantly, at the forefront of these protests were women, who have long chafed under the strict moral codes imposed by the regime. However, while the Islamic Republic ultimately weathered the storm of public anger, this has left many asking what does this mean for the future of the country?  To discuss the protests and their meaning, we’re joined by journalist and author Fatemeh Jamalpour, co-author of the book For the Sun After Long Nights: The Story of Iran’s Women-Led Uprising. Writing from Tehran during these historic events, Fatemeh risked her safety to bear witness to the voices of women and young people demanding freedom, dignity and change. Fatemeh Jamalpour is a feminist journalist banned from working in Iran by the Ministry of Intelligence. Jamalpour has worked as a freelance reporter for outlets such as The Sunday Times, The Paris Review and the Los Angeles Times, and has also held positions at BBC World News in London and Shargh newspaper in Tehran. She has two master's degrees in journalism and communication from Northwestern University and Allameh Tabatabaei University in Tehran and was a 2024-25 Knight-Wallace Fellow at the University of Michigan.

    27 min

About

Talking History is a radio program and podcast created by KSMU Ozarks Public Radio in association with the Missouri State University Department of History. Each month, hosts Djene Bajalan and Patrick Needham speak with historians and scholars about the ideas, people, and events that have shaped our world. Talking History airs on KSMU 91.1 FM the first Thursday of each month at 12:06 pm CT.