5 episodes

This collection features audio podcasts on American history from Yale Professors and distinguished guests.

American History Yale University

    • History
    • 5.0 • 1 Rating

This collection features audio podcasts on American history from Yale Professors and distinguished guests.

    David Blight Discusses Death and the Civil War

    David Blight Discusses Death and the Civil War

    David Blight talks about the carnage of the Civil War and how both sides tried to get back the bodies of their fallen soldiers to bury and memorialize.

    • 5 min
    The Van Vechten Paradox: The Harlem Renaissance, a White Man, and his Black Story

    The Van Vechten Paradox: The Harlem Renaissance, a White Man, and his Black Story

    Carl Van Vechten, a best-selling novelist, archivist, photographer, and negrophile promoted black culture during the era known as the Harlem Renaissance, and beyond. The Harlem Renaissance was a black movement, but it needed whiteness in order to thrive. Carl Van Vechten embodied that necessary whiteness in ways that were multiple, fascinating, and contradictory. Emily Bernard, Professor of English and Ethnic Studies at the University of Vermont chronicles his life.

    • 2 sec
    Alexis de Tocqueville and the Challenge of Democracy

    Alexis de Tocqueville and the Challenge of Democracy

    Frank Turner, John Hay Whitney Professor of History and the director of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University describes the life and writings of Alexis de Tocqueville, the French political thinker and historian best known for "Democracy in America," published after his travels in the United States in 1825.

    • 1 sec
    The Founding Fathers and the American Monarchy

    The Founding Fathers and the American Monarchy

    Frank Prochaska, author of The Eagle and the Crown: Americans and the British Monarchy, argues in his book that America’s Founding Fathers created an “elective king” in the office of the president.

    • 2 sec
    Perspectives on Freedom: An African-American Anecdote

    Perspectives on Freedom: An African-American Anecdote

    An autobiographical, historical metaphorical account of the African American experience. Holloway examines the grave epitaph of freed-slave John Jacks: “God wills us free/ Man wills us slaves/I will what God wills/ God’s will be done". He explores the irony of American ideal of freedom defined by slavery.

    • 11 min

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