New Netherland Praatjes

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New Netherland Praatjes is a series of chats with historians, archaeologists, and other experts on New Netherland and the world of the 17th-century Dutch. New Netherland extended from present-day Albany, New York in the north to Delaware in the south, and encompassed parts of what are now the states…

The New Netherland Institute


    • Dec 14, 2018 LATEST EPISODE
    • infrequent NEW EPISODES
    • 55m AVG DURATION
    • 14 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from New Netherland Praatjes

    014 Joyce Goodfriend, Cultural Authority and the Anglicization Myth in Early New York

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2018 54:29


    Historian Joyce Goodfriend chats with NNI's Steve McErleane about Goodfriend's career as a leading historian of New Netherland and early New York. Topics include the origins of Goodfriend's interest in Dutch New York, the evolution of New Netherland studies and the waning infatuation with the English, the persistence of "Dutchness"——including the role of language and religion——from the seventeenth century through the American Revolution, the nuances of cultural authority and how historians have written about the levers of power, and some potential future paths for New Netherland scholarship.

    013 Peter Van Cleave, Van der Kemp’s Notorious Attempt to Translate the Records of New Netherland

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2018 54:06


    Historian Peter Van Cleave chats with NNI's Steve McErleane and Russell Shorto about nineteenth-century scholar Francis Adrian van der Kemp and Van der Kemp's much-maligned attempt to translate the records of New Netherland ca. 1820, with Van Cleave offering a novel response to Van der Kemp's critics. In many ways a bridge between the 18th- and 19th-century worlds, Van der Kemp's life as a religious dissident and learned scholar help illuminate the complexities of the age. Other topics include New York's tumultuous political climate, the widespread ignorance of the history of New Netherland, and the seemingly impenetrable satire of Washington Irving.

    012 Steve Jaffe, New York at its Core

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2018 53:05


    Author and museum curator Steve Jaffe chats with Steve McErleane and Russell Shorto about Jaffe's work on the "New York at its Core" exhibit at the Museum of the City of New York, a new installation that attempts to answer the question "What makes New York New York?" Topics include the challenges of presenting history to the public, the role of technology in museums, and how museum professionals have dealt with the death of the so-called grand narrative.

    011 Russell Shorto, Revolution Song

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2018 50:44


    Best-selling author, and usual host of this podcast, Russell Shorto sits down with "Praatjes" producer Steve McErleane to discuss Shorto's latest book, Revolution Song: A Story of American Freedom. The conversation also covers Shorto's insights into the interpretation of historical evidence, his thoughts on the craft of writing, and his experiences as an author.

    010 Mark Schaming, New Netherland and the New York State Museum

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2017 50:58


    New York State's Deputy Commissioner for Cultural Education and Director of the State Museum Mark Schaming chats with Russell Shorto about Schaming's three decades of work at the State Museum and his new position overseeing the Office of Cultural Education, which includes the State Museum, State Archives and State Library. Among the topics are, of course, the role of New Netherland in the State Museum, the changing face of the museum (and museums in general), and Schaming's documentation of the massive recovery efforts at the World Trade Center site following the 9/11 attacks.

    009 Dennis Maika, The Economy of Seventeenth-Century New Amsterdam/Manhattan

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2016 61:16


    NNI’s Senior Historian and Education Director Dennis Maika chats with Russell Shorto about Maika’s work on 17th-century New Amsterdam/Manhattan merchants and his work promoting the importance of the seventeenth-century Dutch colony to the New York State Education Department. Topics include the economic structure of the colony, including the role of the Dutch West India Company, and the role of state regulation in the economy.

    008 Heidi Hill, Crailo State Historic Site

    Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2016 46:10


    Crailo State Historic Site Director Heidi Hill chats with Russell Shorto about the history surrounding the settlement of the 17th-century Dutch patroonship of Rensselaerswijck, the history of the building itself, and the evolution of the site as a museum. Heidi also answers the burning question "Were the words to Yankee Doodle actually written at Crailo?"

    007 Janny Venema, The Scholarship of Albany's Origins

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2016 59:38


    Historian and New Netherland Research Center Associate Director Janny Venema chats with Russell Shorto about her more than thirty years of experience working with the documents of New Netherland, her life growing up in the Netherlands, her discovery of the early Dutch history of New York, and her books on early Albany and Kiliaen van Rensselaer, the founder of the patroonship of Rensselaerswijck.

    006 Paul Huey, New Netherland Archaeology

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2016 63:23


    Archaeologist Paul Huey, who has more than four decades of experience excavating sites across New York State, chats with Russell Shorto about Huey’s long and rewarding career. Huey explains the process behind archaeological excavations and the evolution of the excavation process over the centuries. Some of the archaeological digs he details are Schuyler Flatts, the Van Curler house, and Fort Orange.

    005 Jeroen Dewulf, Slavery in New Netherland

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2016 61:00


    Versatile scholar Jeroen Dewulf chats with Russell Shorto about Dewulf's article "Emulating a Portuguese Model: The Slave Policy of the West India Company and the Dutch Reformed Church in Dutch Brazil (1630-1654) and New Netherland (1614-1664) in Comparative Perspective." The main topic of the chat is the influence of Portuguese policies on New Netherland's system of forced labor.

    004 Susanah Romney, Intimate Networks and the 17th-century Atlantic

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2015 58:00


    Historian Susanah Romney, author of the award-winning book New Netherland Connections: Intimate Networks and Atlantic Ties in Seventeenth-Century America, chats with Russell Shorto about Romney's research on intimate networks in the 17th-century Atlantic world and the ambiguities of Dutch translation.

    003 Len Tantillo, The Nature of Historical Painting

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2015 56:00


    Len Tantillo, historical and marine artist, and Russell Shorto discuss Tantillo's distinguished career as a painter and storyteller of the early history of New York State.

    002 James Bradley, Natives in New Netherland

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2015 58:00


    James Bradley, archaeologist and scholar of the American Indian, and Russell Shorto discuss a broad range of topics related to the Indians who once inhabited and some who still inhabit the American northeast.

    001 Charles Gehring, The Historical Significance of New Netherland

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2015 54:00


    Charles Gehring, Director of the New Netherland Research Center, and Russell Shorto discuss various topics, including Dr. Gehring's forty-year career as a translator of the archives of New Netherland and the historical significance of the 17th-century Dutch colony.

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