Podcasts about anti german

  • 13PODCASTS
  • 14EPISODES
  • 32mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Oct 17, 2024LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about anti german

Latest podcast episodes about anti german

Dakota Datebook
October 17: Professor Alfred Koenig

Dakota Datebook

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2024 2:57


When the United States entered World War I in April 1917, suspicion fell on German Americans. Anti-German sentiment led to the prohibition of teaching German in schools, the closure of many German-language newspapers, and persecution for speaking German in public or on the phone.

Politics Theory Other
Germany, Israel, and staatsräson (part one) w/ Bue Rübner Hansen

Politics Theory Other

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2024 65:18


Bue Rübner Hansen joins PTO to talk about his recent essay The New German Chauvinism. In the first part of our conversation we discussed the history of the German-Israeli alliance and how its emergence was far more complicated than is commonly supposed. We discussed the contrasting attitudes to Israel amongst the German public and the political and media class and big business. And we went on to discuss the distinct memory culture around the crimes of Nazism and the Holocaust, that emerged in West Germany during the Cold War and how elements of that culture fostered a political climate in Germany that is, at best, deaf to the suffering of the Palestinians. We also talked about the emergence of the Anti-German current within the German left and how its suspicion of the German working class stemmed from the obliteration of the history of working class opposition to the Nazis. Read Bue's two part essay here: https://lefteast.org/the-new-german-chauvinism-part-i/ https://lefteast.org/the-new-german-chauvinism-part-ii/

Toilet Talk with C.J. Landry
The Cancelled Collection

Toilet Talk with C.J. Landry

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2022 35:12


Is Kanye cancelled? Did Frank Sinatra write Anti-German propaganda songs? Do people with over 10 dogs really just wanting children? And more! Enjoy --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/alljokedup/support

Softcore History
Too German To Live

Softcore History

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2022 76:56


Anti-German sentiment was at an all-time, absolutely bananas high during World War 1. Unfortunately for German immigrant Robert Prager, a local coal mining union used that as an excuse to lynch him just outside St. Louis, Missouri in 1918.

Kindertransport: Remembering & Rethinking
Episode 8: Enemy Aliens

Kindertransport: Remembering & Rethinking

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2020 30:02


Anti-German panic sets in and following Winston Churchill's edict to "collar the lot", all adult Germans and Austrians in the UK -- including Jewish refugees from the Kindertransport who were over 16 -- become "enemy aliens". Restrictions are imposed on their everyday lives, and many are sent to internment camps. Despite this hostility, many go on to join the British armed forces to fight against the Nazis from whom they had once escaped.

Explaining History (explaininghistory) (explaininghistory)
Czechoslovakia's anti German ethnic cleansing 1945

Explaining History (explaininghistory) (explaininghistory)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2019 23:07


At the end of the Second World War, Czech prime minister in exile Eduard Benes petitioned both western allies and the USSR to expel all ethnic Germans from Czechoslovakia. This permission was granted and the result was the ethnic cleansing of the Sudetenland. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Back in the Day
Back in the Day: Anti-German Sentiment in Nashville during World War One

Back in the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2018


Nashville had a strong second generation German community by the time of World War One.  Amy Wannamacher discusses the impact of the strong Anti-German sentiment expresssed on the National, State and local level on the Nashville German community. 

Back in the Day
Back in the Day: Anti-German Sentiment in Nashville during World War One

Back in the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2018


Nashville had a strong second generation German community by the time of World War One.  Amy Wannamacher discusses the impact of the strong Anti-German sentiment expressed on the National, State and local level on the Nashville German community. 

American History Tellers
Prohibition - Drying Out | 2

American History Tellers

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2018 29:44


When a German U-boat torpedoed the RMS Lusitania on Friday, May 7th, 1915, Americans found two new enemies: Germany and the beer it was so associated with. Anti-German sentiment grew, and with it hostility to the breweries founded in the 19th century by German immigrants. Soon, the war effort and the temperance movement were linked: it was patriotic to abstain, and Prohibition became law.How did America cope? They swapped their stool at the bar for a seat at the soda shop, listening to new radios and the first ever baseball broadcasts. But Americans’ thirst wasn’t ever fully quenched: they turned to family doctors who prescribed “medicinal alcohol,” and then finally to the bootleggers, moonshiners and rum-runners who made, smuggled and sold hooch of all types, from top-shelf French cognac to homemade swill that might just kill you.For more about the Lusitania, check out Dead Wake: The Crossing of the Lusitania by Erik Larson.Daniel Okrent’s Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition has more information on medicinal alcohol and how it was prescribed by doctors. To learn more about medicinal beer, this article by Beverly Gage for The Smithsonian is excellent.The 1991 study “Alcohol Consumption During Prohibition” by Jeffrey A. Miron and Jeffrey Zwiebel, is considered the definitive study about how much people actually drank during the noble experiment. For more information on how Prohibition played out in the early days, check out Professor David J. Hanson’s, “Alcohol Problems and Solutions,” a comprehensive, interactive site that outlines all the various stakeholders in the Noble Experiment.To read more about Americans behaving badly in Cuba and other places during Prohibition, check out Wayne Curtis’s And A Bootle of Rum: A History of the World in Ten Cocktails, as well as Matthew Rowley’s Lost Recipes of Prohibition. And, to learn more about rum-runners, Daniel Francis’s book, Closing Time: Prohibition, Rum-Runners and Border Wars is an excellent reference.Further references can be found in America Walks Into a Bar: A Spirited History of Taverns and Saloons, Speakeasies and Grog Shops by Christine Sismondo.Support this show by supporting our sponsors!

ChromeRadio
Chrome360 | ENTER THE PEACE BROKER by Martyn Wade | Episode 2 | The Hero of the European War

ChromeRadio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2018 30:39


EPISODE 2 | THE HERO OF THE EUROPEAN WAR On 2 April 1917, President Woodrow Wilson went to Congress to seek permission to declare war. He was met with tumultuous applause and on 6 April 1917 America finally entered the conflict. A new drama from Martyn Wade - ENTER THE PEACE BROKER - brings America's journey into war vividly alive. Based on first-hand accounts – diaries, letters and contemporary press coverage – it is a compelling story of duplicity and diplomatic intrigue, of colourful personalities engaged in great power politics, and of secret communications between Washington, London and Berlin set against the backdrop of war. JUNE 1915. Anti-German feeling in America is running high following the sinking of the Lusitania. At the front, the Allies are not making the progress they had hoped for. But President Wilson refuses to be drawn into the conflict - he has an election at home to think about. CAST (IN ORDER OF APPEARANCE) COUNT VON BERNSTORFF – Chris Pavlo | COLONEL HOUSE – Nathan Osgood | COUNTESS BLÜCHER – Jasmine Hyde | KURT RIEZLER – Gunnar Cauthery | LORD NORTHCLIFFE – Henry Goodman | MARGOT ASQUITH – Sophie Thompson | AJ BALFOUR – Tim Woodward | EDITH BOLLING – Laurel Lefkow | WILLIAM HINES PAGE – William Hope CREDITS Script consultant - Professor Sir Hew Strachan | Producer - Catriona Oliphant | Director - Elizabeth Rigbey | Sound design - David Chilton | Songs performed by Jessica Walker, with James Holmes on piano A ChromeRadio Production 2017 | With thanks to the Rothermere Foundation

PastPorte: A Time Travelling Podcast
Enter the Peace Broker by Martyn Wade | Ep 2 The Hero of the European War

PastPorte: A Time Travelling Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2017 30:39


EPISODE 2 | THE HERO OF THE EUROPEAN WAR On 2 April 1917, President Woodrow Wilson went to Congress to seek permission to declare war. He was met with tumultuous applause and on 6 April 1917 America finally entered the conflict. A new drama from Martyn Wade - ENTER THE PEACE BROKER - brings America’s journey into war vividly alive. Based on first-hand accounts – diaries, letters and contemporary press coverage – it is a compelling story of duplicity and diplomatic intrigue, of colourful personalities engaged in great power politics, and of secret communications between Washington, London and Berlin set against the backdrop of war. JUNE 1915. Anti-German feeling in America is running high following the sinking of the Lusitania. At the front, the Allies are not making the progress they had hoped for. But President Wilson refuses to be drawn into the conflict - he has an election at home to think about. CAST (IN ORDER OF APPEARANCE) COUNT VON BERNSTORFF – Chris Pavlo | COLONEL HOUSE – Nathan Osgood | COUNTESS BLÜCHER – Jasmine Hyde | KURT RIEZLER – Gunnar Cauthery | LORD NORTHCLIFFE – Henry Goodman | MARGOT ASQUITH – Sophie Thompson | AJ BALFOUR – Tim Woodward | EDITH BOLLING – Laurel Lefkow | WILLIAM HINES PAGE – William Hope CREDITS Script consultant - Professor Sir Hew Strachan | Producer - Catriona Oliphant | Director - Elizabeth Rigbey | Sound design - David Chilton | Songs performed by Jessica Walker, with James Holmes on piano A ChromeRadio Production 2017 | With thanks to the Rothermere Foundation #History #WW1

No Such Thing As A Fish
63: No Such Thing As An Anti-German Sock

No Such Thing As A Fish

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2015 37:35


Live from the Hay Literary Festival, Dan, James, Andy and Anna discuss the world's first novel, a Beatle as Gandalf, and the inventor of the television.

live sock gandalf beatle hay literary festival anti german
World War One
WW1 At Home 6 - Women's Football, Anti-German Riots & the Soldier's Song

World War One

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2014 13:28


The Newcastle women's football champions who were unbeaten during the war, the Hull shop that bore the brunt of anti-German riots and 'Pack up your troubles in your old kit bag', the Welsh hit that boosted morale on the battlefield.

Damn Interesting
-003- The Arizona Dragonslayer

Damn Interesting

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2012 18:12


A simple telegram plunged America into the Great War. The Zimmermann telegram, intercepted by American intelligence in April 1917, revealed Germany’s efforts to encourage Mexico to invade the United States. For a towheaded kid from Arizona named Frank Luke, Jr., and other citizens of the states along the Mexican border, the threat of invasion was real and personal. Anti-German sentiment swept the nation that spring. Sauerkraut became “Victory Cabbage”, the precursor to Freedom Fries, and suspicion fell on families of German descent such as the Lukes, whose name had been Luecke just a generation before. The immigrants’ son Frank Luke, Jr. had a lot to prove when he joined the Army a few months later. By the time Luke completed flight training, received his commission, and joined the 27th Aero Squadron in France in July 1918, the surge of American forces onto the Western Front promised a swift end to the war – and the life expectancy of a pursuit pilot at the front was just three weeks. If Frank Luke was going to prove anything, he needed to work fast. In just a few months, he would demonstrate how well he could work under pressure, becoming one of the most decorated flyers of the First World War.