The History Onion

History Onion

Peeling back the layers of history and learning lessons for creating positive change in the present historyonion.substack.com

  1. The Murder of Víctor Jara (Modern Chile Ep. 8)

    May 4

    The Murder of Víctor Jara (Modern Chile Ep. 8)

    Víctor Jara, sometimes referred to as the “Bob Dylan of South America,” was a Chilean folk singer who rose to prominence in the 1960s as part of the nueva canción movement. His songs were often deeply political in nature, providing a voice for the Chilean working class and peasantry. In 1970, his recording of “Venceremos” (We Will Win) became the anthem of the left-wing Popular Unity coalition led by Salvador Allende. After winning the presidency, Allende made his victory speech in front of a banner that read, ‘You can’t have a revolution without songs.’ The story of Víctor Jara is a tragic one; his life was brutally cut short in the aftermath of the 1973 coup that left President Allende dead and installed General Augusto Pinochet as the head of a military junta. One among thousands of people who were arrested and detained in the succeeding days, Jara was tortured and murdered in Estadio Chile on September 16th, 1973. His legacy, however, lives on. On today’s episode, we discuss the political and musical maturation of Víctor Jara, his influences and contemporaries in the nueva canción movement, and his murder at the hands of the nascent Pinochet dictatorship. Show Notes Fundación Víctor Jara Bad Bunny tribute to Víctor Jara Victor Jara: The folk singer murdered for his music Britannica article on nueva canción Britannica bio of Jara The Life and Death of Victor Jara Credits Theme music by our youngest brother Tate. Cover art by Arthur Santoro. Get full access to The History Onion at historyonion.substack.com/subscribe

    1h 4m
  2. The Suicide Museum, with Ariel Dorfman (Modern Chile Interview 2)

    Mar 4

    The Suicide Museum, with Ariel Dorfman (Modern Chile Interview 2)

    We are excited today to share our interview with Ariel Dorfman, an Argentine-Chilean-American novelist, playwright, essayist, academic, and human rights activist. Professor Dorfman served as a cultural adviser to Chilean President Salvador Allende’s Chief of Staff during the last months of Allende’s presidency, and wrote a seminal critique of US cultural imperialism, How to Read Donald Duck, during this time. He was forced into exile, ending up in the United States in 1980 following the military coup led by General Pinochet in 1973. Often dealing with historical and political themes, his books have been published in over fifty languages and his plays performed in more than one hundred countries. Death and the Maiden, his 1990 play written as Chile transitioned shakily from dictatorship to democracy, is a powerful political and psychological thriller dealing with the traumas of a country dealing with the aftermath of repressive authoritarian rule. His writing has appeared in such publications as The New York Times, The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, The Guardian and more. Professor Dorfman is considered one of Latin America’s greatest novelists, with historical novels such as Allegro and Konfidenz, and he is currently the Walter Hines Emeritus Professor of Literature at Duke University. We are honored to have him on the show to discuss his novel The Suicide Museum. Show Notes Purchase a copy of The Suicide Museum here Credits Theme music by our youngest brother Tate. Cover art by Arthur Santoro. Get full access to The History Onion at historyonion.substack.com/subscribe

    54 min
  3. A Progressive Economic Program for the Future, with Alex Williams

    Feb 6

    A Progressive Economic Program for the Future, with Alex Williams

    We are excited to be joined today by Alex Williams, the principal US economist at Common Wealth, a progressive think tank operating across the US and UK, as well as a policy fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research and the Editor-in-Chief of the Substack newsletter Continuous Variation. Previously, Alex worked at Employ America, where he advocated for full employment policies in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. In this episode, we have a wide-ranging conversation about progressive economics. The first part of the episode takes us from Alex’s background as an economist to the economic record of the Biden administration, whose economic program has come to be known as Bidenomics. Alex’s recent piece for Common Wealth titled “Beyond Bidenomics” serves as the jumping-off point for this part of our conversation. As the episode goes on, we turn to a discussion about a progressive economic program for the future, digging into the importance of active state management of the economy, whether in terms of provision of basic needs like healthcare and housing or the transition away from fossil fuels and towards a green economy. This discussion links nicely with a new project by Common Wealth called Forces of Production, which is geared precisely towards facilitating effective state management of the economy by providing detailed analysis of economic data from a progressive perspective. More specifically, the project is a macro data newsletter that will be published monthly on Substack, with its first issue out next Monday, February 9th. We will link the newsletter’s launch post outlining what the project is all about in the show notes below, and definitely recommend you check it out. Show Notes Forces of Production launch post: “Atop the Forces of Production” (1/20/26) Credits Theme music by our youngest brother Tate. Cover art by Arthur Santoro. Get full access to The History Onion at historyonion.substack.com/subscribe

    53 min

Ratings & Reviews

3.7
out of 5
6 Ratings

About

Peeling back the layers of history and learning lessons for creating positive change in the present historyonion.substack.com