AHR Interview

Ein Podcast von American Historical Association

Kategorien:

47 Folgen

  1. Liz Covart BONUS

    Vom: 12.9.2019
  2. Liz Covart on the State of History Podcasting

    Vom: 12.9.2019
  3. Robert Greene on His Film "Bisbee '17"

    Vom: 20.5.2019
  4. Kathryn Tomasek on Historians and Digital Scholarship

    Vom: 2.5.2019
  5. Kathryn Olivarius on Her Article “Immunity, Capital, and Power in Antebellum New Orleans”

    Vom: 25.3.2019
  6. Brandon Byrd on African American Intellectual History

    Vom: 18.3.2019
  7. The Fire at the National Museum in Rio de Janeiro

    Vom: 4.2.2019
  8. Bianca Premo & Yanna Yannakakis: “A Court of Sticks and Branches"

    Vom: 28.1.2019
  9. Trevor Getz on Graphic History

    Vom: 12.12.2018
  10. Regina Kunzel on Her Article "The Power of Queer History"

    Vom: 29.11.2018
  11. A Look Back at Lara Putnam’s Article “The Transnational and the Text-Searchable”

    Vom: 25.10.2018
  12. David Minto on His Article “Perversion by Penumbras”

    Vom: 17.9.2018
  13. AHR Interview: Historians on Hamilton

    Vom: 17.8.2018
  14. AHR Interview: Sean Jacobs on the Film Black Panther

    Vom: 10.7.2018
  15. AHR Interview: Andre Carrington on the Film Black Panther

    Vom: 10.7.2018
  16. AHR Interview: Nwando Achebe on the Film Black Panther

    Vom: 10.7.2018
  17. AHR Interview: Tanisha Ford on the Film Black Panther

    Vom: 10.7.2018
  18. AHR Interview: Donna Murch Discusses Her Essay “Black Liberation and 1968”

    Vom: 13.6.2018
  19. Taymiya Zaman on Her Article for the New Section “History Unclassified”

    Vom: 5.6.2018
  20. AHR Interview with Paul Kramer on His Article on U.S. Immigration Policy

    Vom: 24.4.2018

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AHR Interview presents brief discussions with historians whose work has appeared in the American Historical Review, the official publication of the American Historical Association. Sometimes the interview accompanies an article or a featured review in a current or recent issue; other times it will feature a scholar who has recently been in the news, but whose work appeared in the journal in the past. These accessible and user-friendly podcasts highlight historical scholarship of wide interest and enormous import for issues of the day.

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