Podcasts about history association

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Best podcasts about history association

Latest podcast episodes about history association

Q-Media's On Demand
A Conversation with Judy Scholin and Julie Berglund of the Pine City Area History Association

Q-Media's On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2023 13:42


A Conversation with Judy Scholin and Julie Berglund of the Pine City Area History Association. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/wcmp-news/message

conversations pine berglund history association
The Royal Irish Academy
Sisters II - Reassessing Anna and Fanny Parnell

The Royal Irish Academy

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2022 36:53


The third lunchtime lecture of this series held on 19 October 2022 and delivered by Dr Diane Urquhart, Professor of Gender History at Queen's University Belfast, on Anna and Fanny Parnell. Diane Urquhart is Professor of Gender History in the School of History, Anthropology, Philosophy and Politics (HAPP) of Queen's University Belfast and President of the Women's History Association of Ireland (WHAI). Her publications include Irish divorce: a history (Cambridge, 2020); The ladies of Londonderry: women and political patronage, 1800–1959 (London & New York, 2007); Women in Ulster politics, 1890–1940: a history not yet told (Dublin, 2000); and, with Lindsey Earner-Byrne, she co-authored Irish abortion journey, 1920–2018 (London, 2019).

Born In The Bend
Fall & Winter Holiday Events Round-Up! In this episode, Em & Aime share upcoming events for the Fort Bend History Association

Born In The Bend

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2022 34:31


This week we have a special episode sponsored by the Fort Bend History Association. Join us as we sip and chat about delicious upcoming events. Mark your calendars for good brews, fresh food, music, and community! Experience the holiday season through the lens of quaint downtown Richmond.   - - - - For up-to-the-minute updates on all these events and more, follow @jaxand7th, @theguildtx, and @fortbendmuseum on instagram. To purchase tickets to Bites & Brews on November 10 at the Fort Bend Museum, click here. To find the route map for the Community Christmas Walk happening December 2 in Downtown Richmond, click here. For all other events mentioned in this episode, visit the Fort Bend Museum's website events page, here.  - - - - Thank you to our beverage sponsor, Imperial Wines, now open in Sugar Land, TX. 

New Books Network
W. Puck Brecher, "Animal Care in Japanese Tradition: A Short History" (Association for Asian Studies, 2022)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2022 34:08


In Animal Care in Japanese Tradition: A Short History (Association for Asian Studies, 2022), Brecher offers a brief overview of animals in Japanese culture and society from ancient times to the 1950s. Brecher questions common assumptions about the treatment and care of animals in Japan, correcting ahistorical understandings of the human-animal relationship that have gained widespread acceptance.  The subject itself is fascinating in its own right, but learning about it carries an additional benefit: it helps us challenge two pervasive assumptions about Japan. The first is that Japan differs fundamentally from other, particularly Western, nations. This premise reinforces the view that cultural differences carry greater historical importance than similarities. The second assumption is that societal changes connected to Japanese modernization are of greater historical importance than continuities, a notion that foregrounds modern Japan's departure from its native traditions and its assimilation of Western ones. This volume's historical overview of Japan's relationship with animals does not dwell at length on these points, but its discussion of traditional animal care does enable us to revisit and reassess these issues in a new light. It also allows us to scrutinize Japanese tradition and interrogate ahistorical claims about Japan's culturally endemic “love” and empathy for the natural world. Departing from existing scholarship on the subject, the book discovers theoretical and practical commonalities between “Japanese” and “Western” approaches to animal care and shows how this partially shared tradition facilitated Japanese modernization. Jingyi Li is a PhD Candidate in Japanese History at the University of Arizona. She researches about early modern Japan, literati, and commercial publishing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network

New Books in History
W. Puck Brecher, "Animal Care in Japanese Tradition: A Short History" (Association for Asian Studies, 2022)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2022 34:08


In Animal Care in Japanese Tradition: A Short History (Association for Asian Studies, 2022), Brecher offers a brief overview of animals in Japanese culture and society from ancient times to the 1950s. Brecher questions common assumptions about the treatment and care of animals in Japan, correcting ahistorical understandings of the human-animal relationship that have gained widespread acceptance.  The subject itself is fascinating in its own right, but learning about it carries an additional benefit: it helps us challenge two pervasive assumptions about Japan. The first is that Japan differs fundamentally from other, particularly Western, nations. This premise reinforces the view that cultural differences carry greater historical importance than similarities. The second assumption is that societal changes connected to Japanese modernization are of greater historical importance than continuities, a notion that foregrounds modern Japan's departure from its native traditions and its assimilation of Western ones. This volume's historical overview of Japan's relationship with animals does not dwell at length on these points, but its discussion of traditional animal care does enable us to revisit and reassess these issues in a new light. It also allows us to scrutinize Japanese tradition and interrogate ahistorical claims about Japan's culturally endemic “love” and empathy for the natural world. Departing from existing scholarship on the subject, the book discovers theoretical and practical commonalities between “Japanese” and “Western” approaches to animal care and shows how this partially shared tradition facilitated Japanese modernization. Jingyi Li is a PhD Candidate in Japanese History at the University of Arizona. She researches about early modern Japan, literati, and commercial publishing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history

New Books in East Asian Studies
W. Puck Brecher, "Animal Care in Japanese Tradition: A Short History" (Association for Asian Studies, 2022)

New Books in East Asian Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2022 34:08


In Animal Care in Japanese Tradition: A Short History (Association for Asian Studies, 2022), Brecher offers a brief overview of animals in Japanese culture and society from ancient times to the 1950s. Brecher questions common assumptions about the treatment and care of animals in Japan, correcting ahistorical understandings of the human-animal relationship that have gained widespread acceptance.  The subject itself is fascinating in its own right, but learning about it carries an additional benefit: it helps us challenge two pervasive assumptions about Japan. The first is that Japan differs fundamentally from other, particularly Western, nations. This premise reinforces the view that cultural differences carry greater historical importance than similarities. The second assumption is that societal changes connected to Japanese modernization are of greater historical importance than continuities, a notion that foregrounds modern Japan's departure from its native traditions and its assimilation of Western ones. This volume's historical overview of Japan's relationship with animals does not dwell at length on these points, but its discussion of traditional animal care does enable us to revisit and reassess these issues in a new light. It also allows us to scrutinize Japanese tradition and interrogate ahistorical claims about Japan's culturally endemic “love” and empathy for the natural world. Departing from existing scholarship on the subject, the book discovers theoretical and practical commonalities between “Japanese” and “Western” approaches to animal care and shows how this partially shared tradition facilitated Japanese modernization. Jingyi Li is a PhD Candidate in Japanese History at the University of Arizona. She researches about early modern Japan, literati, and commercial publishing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/east-asian-studies

New Books in Anthropology
W. Puck Brecher, "Animal Care in Japanese Tradition: A Short History" (Association for Asian Studies, 2022)

New Books in Anthropology

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2022 34:08


In Animal Care in Japanese Tradition: A Short History (Association for Asian Studies, 2022), Brecher offers a brief overview of animals in Japanese culture and society from ancient times to the 1950s. Brecher questions common assumptions about the treatment and care of animals in Japan, correcting ahistorical understandings of the human-animal relationship that have gained widespread acceptance.  The subject itself is fascinating in its own right, but learning about it carries an additional benefit: it helps us challenge two pervasive assumptions about Japan. The first is that Japan differs fundamentally from other, particularly Western, nations. This premise reinforces the view that cultural differences carry greater historical importance than similarities. The second assumption is that societal changes connected to Japanese modernization are of greater historical importance than continuities, a notion that foregrounds modern Japan's departure from its native traditions and its assimilation of Western ones. This volume's historical overview of Japan's relationship with animals does not dwell at length on these points, but its discussion of traditional animal care does enable us to revisit and reassess these issues in a new light. It also allows us to scrutinize Japanese tradition and interrogate ahistorical claims about Japan's culturally endemic “love” and empathy for the natural world. Departing from existing scholarship on the subject, the book discovers theoretical and practical commonalities between “Japanese” and “Western” approaches to animal care and shows how this partially shared tradition facilitated Japanese modernization. Jingyi Li is a PhD Candidate in Japanese History at the University of Arizona. She researches about early modern Japan, literati, and commercial publishing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/anthropology

New Books in Japanese Studies
W. Puck Brecher, "Animal Care in Japanese Tradition: A Short History" (Association for Asian Studies, 2022)

New Books in Japanese Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2022 34:08


In Animal Care in Japanese Tradition: A Short History (Association for Asian Studies, 2022), Brecher offers a brief overview of animals in Japanese culture and society from ancient times to the 1950s. Brecher questions common assumptions about the treatment and care of animals in Japan, correcting ahistorical understandings of the human-animal relationship that have gained widespread acceptance.  The subject itself is fascinating in its own right, but learning about it carries an additional benefit: it helps us challenge two pervasive assumptions about Japan. The first is that Japan differs fundamentally from other, particularly Western, nations. This premise reinforces the view that cultural differences carry greater historical importance than similarities. The second assumption is that societal changes connected to Japanese modernization are of greater historical importance than continuities, a notion that foregrounds modern Japan's departure from its native traditions and its assimilation of Western ones. This volume's historical overview of Japan's relationship with animals does not dwell at length on these points, but its discussion of traditional animal care does enable us to revisit and reassess these issues in a new light. It also allows us to scrutinize Japanese tradition and interrogate ahistorical claims about Japan's culturally endemic “love” and empathy for the natural world. Departing from existing scholarship on the subject, the book discovers theoretical and practical commonalities between “Japanese” and “Western” approaches to animal care and shows how this partially shared tradition facilitated Japanese modernization. Jingyi Li is a PhD Candidate in Japanese History at the University of Arizona. She researches about early modern Japan, literati, and commercial publishing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/japanese-studies

New Books in Animal Studies
W. Puck Brecher, "Animal Care in Japanese Tradition: A Short History" (Association for Asian Studies, 2022)

New Books in Animal Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2022 34:08


In Animal Care in Japanese Tradition: A Short History (Association for Asian Studies, 2022), Brecher offers a brief overview of animals in Japanese culture and society from ancient times to the 1950s. Brecher questions common assumptions about the treatment and care of animals in Japan, correcting ahistorical understandings of the human-animal relationship that have gained widespread acceptance.  The subject itself is fascinating in its own right, but learning about it carries an additional benefit: it helps us challenge two pervasive assumptions about Japan. The first is that Japan differs fundamentally from other, particularly Western, nations. This premise reinforces the view that cultural differences carry greater historical importance than similarities. The second assumption is that societal changes connected to Japanese modernization are of greater historical importance than continuities, a notion that foregrounds modern Japan's departure from its native traditions and its assimilation of Western ones. This volume's historical overview of Japan's relationship with animals does not dwell at length on these points, but its discussion of traditional animal care does enable us to revisit and reassess these issues in a new light. It also allows us to scrutinize Japanese tradition and interrogate ahistorical claims about Japan's culturally endemic “love” and empathy for the natural world. Departing from existing scholarship on the subject, the book discovers theoretical and practical commonalities between “Japanese” and “Western” approaches to animal care and shows how this partially shared tradition facilitated Japanese modernization. Jingyi Li is a PhD Candidate in Japanese History at the University of Arizona. She researches about early modern Japan, literati, and commercial publishing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/animal-studies

Women's History Association of Ireland
Cumann na mBan, the Anglo-Irish Treaty and the Split, 1922; A Symposium

Women's History Association of Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2022 122:32


UCD Gender Studies and Women's History Association of Ireland (WHAI) presents 'Cumann na mBan, the Anglo-Irish Treaty and the Split, 1922; A symposium' (25/02/22)

Outside Lands San Francisco
195: San Francisco History Association (Repodcast)

Outside Lands San Francisco

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2022 26:00


In this classic episode, we fondly remember our dear friend, Ron Ross, inveterate collector and founder of the San Francisco History Association. Ron joined the pod in 2016 to tell us his origin story, about his collection of San Francsico ephemera, and recall the founding of the San Francisco History Association.

Born In The Bend
REPLAY - Exploring the Fort Bend Museum with Ana Alicia

Born In The Bend

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2022 32:26


In anticipation of Season 3 launching on February 15, we're replaying some listener favorites from our first two seasons. Since airing the Fort Bend Museum episode from season 1 in June of 2020, so much has changed! The brand-new museum building has opened, Emily has joined the board of the Fort Bend History Association, and after a two-year pause, plans for the History Association's annual gala, the Lone Star Stomp on Saturday, April 9, are underway. Enjoyed this episode? Support the Fort Bend History Association's efforts by purchasing a ticket to the Lone Star Stomp at www.fbhistory.org.

museum fort bend history association
QUB Talks 100 – The Partition of Ireland: Causes and Consequences
Professor Diane Urquhart – Gender and Partition

QUB Talks 100 – The Partition of Ireland: Causes and Consequences

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2021 17:47


Contributor: Professor Diane Urquhart Talk Title: Gender and Partition Talk Synopsis: This talk explores the gender dimension to Partition, including its background and effects. It looks at the role played by the Ulster Women's Unionist Council as ‘the largest body of political women in Ireland's history' and the ways in which women's lives were affected by the politics, policies and attitudes of the states that emerged from the post-Partition period. It draws on contemporary accounts of events in the early 1920s, including about the impact of violence on community relations and against women. And it suggests that hearing ‘a different cast of voices, many of them female, allows partition to emerge as a history that is replete with raw emotion', revealing ‘a gender history that often unites more than it divides those who were placed on both sides of the Irish border.' Short Biography: Diane Urquhart is Professor of Gender History at Queen's University Belfast and President of the Women's History Association of Ireland (WHAI). Further Reading: Women and the Irish Revolution – Linda Connolly (ed.) The Irish Abortion Journey – Lindsey Earner-Byrne and Diane Urquhart, A Nation and not a Rabble: The Irish revolution, 1913-1923 – Diarmaid Ferriter The Partition of Ireland, 1911-1925 – Michael Laffan The Burnings 1920 – Pearse Lalor The Partition of Ireland, 1918-25 – Robert Lynch Renegades: Irish republican women, 1900-1923 – Ann Matthews Birth of the border: The Impact of Partition in Ireland – Cormac Moore

Labor History Today
Workers on Arrival: Black Labor in the Making of America

Labor History Today

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2021 29:55


Historian Joe William Trotter, Jr. traces black workers’ complicated journey from the transatlantic slave trade through the American Century to the demise of the industrial order in the 21st century. Joe Trotter is Professor of History at Carnegie Mellon University; he discussed his book Workers on Arrival last month at an East Side Freedom Library History Book Club virtual event co-sponsored by the University of Minnesota’s Department of History, the Ramsey County Historical Society, and the Labor and Working-class History Association. The talk was moderated by William Jones, Professor of History at the University of Minnesota. On today’s Labor History in 2: Work Faster! Work Faster! Produced/edited by Chris Garlock. To contribute a labor history item, email laborhistorytoday@gmail.com Labor History Today is produced by the Metro Washington Council’s Union City Radio and the Kalmanovitz Initiative for Labor and the Working Poor at Georgetown University. We're a proud founding member of the Labor Radio Podcast Network, more than 100 shows focusing on working people’s issues and concerns. #LaborRadioPod #LaborRadioPod @ILLaborHistory @ESFLibrary Edited/produced by Chris Garlock; social media guru: Harold Phillips

Homeschooling & Loving It!
Episode 43: Black History Studies for Homeschoolers | Yocum African American History Association

Homeschooling & Loving It!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2020 27:34


FOLLOW US ON: APPLE PODCASTS | GOOGLE PLAY | STITCHER Here today to talk with us about ways we can include Black History in our homeschool are two wonderful ladies, Sandy Yocum and Frances Presley Rice with the Yocum African American Historical Association, also known as YAAHA. Sandy is the founder and President of YAAHA and is joining us from […] The post Episode 43: Black History Studies for Homeschoolers | Yocum African American History Association first appeared on Homeschool.com.

UCC 98.3FM Features and Docs
The Road to the Vote Part 1

UCC 98.3FM Features and Docs

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2020 20:15


Programme 1 charts the development of the suffrage movement in Ireland and the role of the Irish Citizen newspaper, the mouthpiece of the Irish Women's Suffrage League. The programme assesses the influence of Britain's Emily Pankhurst and her more militant suffragette movement, the Women's Social and Political Union, on the more pacifist Irish suffragists. Discussion points for this programme include the effects of the 1913 Lockout on the attitude of many key figures such as the poet W.B. Yeats, and the dramatist Sean O'Casey- to Irish politics and the influence of the socialist thinker, James Connolly- on the Irish suffrage movement. Also the opposition of John Redmond's Irish Parliamentary Party to women's suffrage, provides a challenging field of discussion. Dr Doyle O'Neill is a Board member of the Cork Film Festival, as well as being an active committee member of IFUT. She is also a member of The Women's History Association, the National Union of Journalists, as well as being a patron of the UCC Journalism Society. She has also written an historical play on the women of 1916, called Walking with Ireland into the Sun, which was performed throughout Munster during 1916/17 . She has also written an award winning radio series, The Road to the Vote: The fight for female suffrage in Ireland, which is currently available on the Oireachtas website in Dail Éireann. Dr Doyle O' Neill is a broadcast historian. She was the first UCC graduate to receive a Doctorate in Ireland's radio and television history. She lectures in the area of Ireland's broadcast and film history- as well as in the area of Crime and the Media- as part of the BA in Criminology. She is author of The Gaybo Revolution: How Gay Byrne Challenged Irish Society, which is currently a recommended text for the Leaving Certificate

Clare FM - Podcasts
Clare Resident Co-Authors No 1 Bestseller

Clare FM - Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2020 8:04


Old Ireland in Colour celebrates the rich history of Ireland and the Irish through the colour restoration of stunning images of all walks of Irish life, and the Irish abroad, throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. From the chaos of the Civil War to the simple beauty of the islands, each image has been exquisitely transformed and every page is bursting with life. Old Ireland in Colour started in 2019 when John Breslin developed an interest in historic photo colourisation, enhancement and restoration through personal genealogical research. He began to colourise old family photos – photos of his grandparents from Fanore in Co. Clare and Glenties in Co. Donegal. The book is co-authored by Quilty-based, Dr Sarah-Anne Buckley - a lecturer in History at NUI Galway and President of the Women’s History Association of Ireland. She has published two monographs, four edited volumes and numerous articles. She is co-founder of the Irish Centre for the Histories of Labour and Class. Old Ireland in Colour has become the must have book of this gift season - outselling the Guiness Book of World Records in its first week of publication! On Tuesday's Morning Focus, Gavin Grace spoke to Dr. Sarah Anne Buckley, co-author of the book.

My Side of the Universe
Episode 137- Images of America Price

My Side of the Universe

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2020 49:42


Todd is joined this week on the show by Bobcat and Kitty, owners of The Eastern Utah Tourism and History Association, the sponsor of My Side of the Universe. Bobcat and Kitty join the show to talk about their latest book: "Images of America Price". Founded by Mormons and settled by immigrants, Price, Utah, is a city of contradictions. Settled in the late 1870s, it was not until the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad discovered coal in the surrounding mountains that the town bloomed. Nearly overnight, trainloads of coal and other merchandise made Price into the commercial center of eastern Utah. As one of the safe havens for Butch Cassidy's Wild Bunch, it was their outlaw gold that funded the city's continued growth. With one of the most outspoken mayors the city ever had, Price fought the State of Utah for the right to maintain its saloons, gambling halls, and bawdy houses.

Texas Lawnchair Talk
Episode 62: 2020 NFL Draft Special

Texas Lawnchair Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2020 135:27


Texas Lawnchair Talk is back with the longest installment so far in the year 2020! Tim and Kevin discuss this week's NFL Draft. They talk about the directions different teams should go, with special emphasis on the Giants, Texans, Chiefs, and Bills. Following this up is a first round mock draft! We will be back again later this week with another history episode in honor of the 164th anniversary of the Battle of San Jacinto! We are also running a fundraiser for San Jacinto Museum of History Association on our Facebook page, so go check that out! For more NFL Draft talk and articles, be sure to follow Kevin on Twitter at @CCS_KW. Tim has also been more active lately at @TexLawnchairTim. Stay tuned for more Texas Lawnchair Talk!

My Side of the Universe
Episode 123- How to Ghost Hunt

My Side of the Universe

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2019


Todd is joined on this week's show by Darrin Bobcat Teply, who talks about what you should bring when attempting to ghost hunt. Teply, owner of the Eastern Utah Tourism and History Association, has a great deal of experience in regards to ghost hunting, specifically in Eastern Utah.

ghosts ghost hunt history association
My Side of the Universe
Episode 123- How to Ghost Hunt

My Side of the Universe

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2019


Todd is joined on this week's show by Darrin Bobcat Teply, who talks about what you should bring when attempting to ghost hunt. Teply, owner of the Eastern Utah Tourism and History Association, has a great deal of experience in regards to ghost hunting, specifically in Eastern Utah.

ghosts ghost hunt history association
COHDScast
Special Episode: Oral History Association

COHDScast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2019 15:00


The Centre for Oral History and Digital Storytelling co-hosted the Oral History Association Annual Meeting (http://www.oralhistory.org/) from October 10 to 14, 2018. With 140 sessions, 800 delegates, and 25 parallel research-creation projects, this was an unprecedented showcase for oral history research, and research-creation, in Montreal. For this special episode, COHDScast attended the "Beyond Women’s Words" book launch (https://bit.ly/2ybNt6Q) on October 12 and interviewed three women scholars and researchers; Professor Lynn Abrams (https://bit.ly/2MnqGbX), queer feminist activist Ponni Arasu (https://bit.ly/2FQ0uWa), and PhD candidate Kiera Anderson (http://kieraanderson.com/). You can also hear audio excerpts from the performance "Come Wash with Us: Seeking Home in Story" presented by the Tasht Collective (http://www.tashtcollective.com/) during the book launch.

My Side of the Universe
Episode 114- Ghosts, Aliens and Experiences with EUTHA

My Side of the Universe

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2018


Todd is joined on the show this week by SueAnn of the Eastern Utah Tourism and History Association, the exclusive sponsor of My Side of the Universe. During her time on the show, the two discussed a variety of different topics including Ghosts, Aliens and Experiences.

1st100k: Business & Entrepreneurship Podcast
Episode 8: Charlie Hewitt - Mile of History Association, Fmr Chief Information Officer - Providence

1st100k: Business & Entrepreneurship Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2018 29:58


Charlie Hewitt has had a long, impressive career in I.T. culminating in a position as Chief Information Officer for the City of Providence RI (2003-2010) and as Director of the Health Information Exchange, Program Management (2010-2015). He is now involved in the Mile of History Association (MoHA) which aims to restore and preserve the historically significant Benefit Street in Providence, RI. They chat from history to how A.I. is going to change health care and the use of electronic health records in a big way.

Southern Irish Loyalism in Context
Episode 14 - Panel 4a - ‘The future welfare of the Empire will depend more largely on our women and girls’: southern loyalist women and the British war effort in Ireland 1914-1918 - Dr Fionnuala Walsh

Southern Irish Loyalism in Context

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2017 25:59


During the First World War thousands of women in Ireland performed a parallel war service to that of men in the British Army. The women joined the Red Cross, St John Ambulance Association, the Irish War Hospital Supply Depot and many other voluntary organisations, offering their time and labour for free. They did so for a variety of motives: personal, political and associational. Many felt a strong identification with the British war effort and a desire to prove their loyalty to Britain, when it was coming under question from Ulster unionists and many of those in Britain, particularly after the Easter Rising. Much of this war service took place through parish organisations connected to the various Protestant denominations or through the pre-existing Anglican women’s organisations: the Mothers’ Union, Girls’ Friendly Society and Young Women’s Christian Association. Although many catholic and nationalist (and catholic nationalist) women supported the war effort, the membership of organisations like the Red Cross was dominated by Protestants. The imbalance in participation levels became even more pronounced after the Easter Rising when war service became even more associated with a British or imperial identity. The relationships between Catholics and Protestants, and between unionist Ulster and southern Ireland became increasingly strained during the war, with women’s war service acting as both a catalyst and a prism for viewing these divisions. This paper uses the war service of women in southern Ireland as a means of exploring southern loyalist identity during this tumultuous period. Dr Fionnuala Walsh is an Irish Research Council postdoctoral research fellow in the Department of History at Trinity College Dublin. She completed her PhD in 2015 and held the 2015-2016 Research Studentship in the National Library of Ireland. She is currently writing a monograph on the impact of the First World War on women in Ireland. Dr Walsh is the membership secretary of the Women’s History Association of Ireland.

Outside Lands San Francisco
195: San Francisco History Association

Outside Lands San Francisco

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2016 24:13


Collector Ron Ross shares his personal history in the city and the 35 year history of the San Francisco History Association.

history san francisco history association
Breaking History Podcast
Episode 3: Food History with Dr. Rick Warner, President of the World History Association

Breaking History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2016 44:03


Join Northeastern University Graduate Students Bridget Keown, James Robinson, Jessica Muttitt, and Olivier Schouteden as we join Professor Rick Warner of Wabash College, and President of the World History Association. We talk about Dr. Warner's work in world history through food studies, as well as the work of the World History Association. Dr. Warner talks about world history methodology and research within his role as WHA President, as well as the coming WHA annual conference in Ghent. We make the big connections! Books in the field: The New World History: A Teacher's Companion by Ross E. Dunn http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/555928.The_New_World_History Before European Hegemony: The World System A.D. 1250-1350 by Janet L. Abu-Lughod https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/171369.Before_European_Hegemony Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History by Sidney W. Mintz https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/167457.Sweetness_and_Power The Rise of the West: A History of the Human Community by William Hardy McNeill https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1932185.The_Rise_of_the_West The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492 by Alfred W. Crosby https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/340415.The_Columbian_Exchange News item discussed: "Weary professors give up, concede that Africa is a country" By Laura Seay and Kim Yi Dionne https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey-cage/wp/2016/04/01/weary-professors-give-up-concede-that-africa-is-a-country/ Credits: Brought to you by the Northeastern Graduate History Association Sound editing: Beka Bryer Produced: Dan Squizzero Music by Kieran Legg Rate, review, and subscribe on iTunes! Feedback/love/hate/comments/concerns/suggestions: breakinghistorypodcast@gmail.com Facebook page: www.facebook.com/breakhist/ Website to come!

Kommunismusgeschichte
Kommunismusgeschichte als Herausforderung für die deutsche und europäische Erinnerungskultur - Teil 2

Kommunismusgeschichte

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 1969 176:23


2017 wird es 100 Jahre her sein, dass in der sogenannten Oktoberrevolution in Russland erstmals eine kommunistische Bewegung die staatliche Macht übernahm. Gemeinsam mit dem Deutschen Historischen Museum lud die Bundesstiftung Aufarbeitung Vertreterinnen und Vertreter von Museen, Aufarbeitungsinstitutionen, Wissenschaft und Medien zu einem Workshop ein, um Projekte zum Jahrestag vorzustellen und anzuregen. Im zweiten Teil des Workshop folgten weitere Projektpräsentationen. Lena Ens von der Bundesstiftung Aufarbeitung stellte zunächst das Projekt "Erinnerungsorte an den Kommunismus" vor. Danach sprachen Dr. Jure Gasparic vom Slowenischen Institut für Zeitgeschichte sowie Nina Kraus und Klara Schwalbe von der International Students of History Association. Weitere Projekte wurden vorgestellt durch den Verein Gegen Vergessen-Für Demokratie, vertreten durch Ruth Wunnicke, die Volkshochschule München, vertreten durch Dr. Robert Mucha, sowie die Arbeitsgruppe Nordhessen-Südniedersachsen von Gegen Vergessen-Für Demokratie e.V., vertreten durch Ernst Klein Zum Abschluss der Veranstaltung präsentierten Bernd Buder vom Filmfestival Cottbus, Dr. Regina Bouchehri von Looksfilm TV sowie die Film- und Videoproduzenten Loretta Walz und Gerald Grote sowie Claus Oppermann ihre Projekte.

Geschichte(n) hören
Kommunismusgeschichte als Herausforderung für die deutsche und europäische Erinnerungskultur - Teil 2

Geschichte(n) hören

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 1969 176:23


2017 wird es 100 Jahre her sein, dass in der sogenannten Oktoberrevolution in Russland erstmals eine kommunistische Bewegung die staatliche Macht übernahm. Gemeinsam mit dem Deutschen Historischen Museum lud die Bundesstiftung Aufarbeitung Vertreterinnen und Vertreter von Museen, Aufarbeitungsinstitutionen, Wissenschaft und Medien zu einem Workshop ein, um Projekte zum Jahrestag vorzustellen und anzuregen. Im zweiten Teil des Workshop folgten weitere Projektpräsentationen. Lena Ens von der Bundesstiftung Aufarbeitung stellte zunächst das Projekt "Erinnerungsorte an den Kommunismus" vor. Danach sprachen Dr. Jure Gasparic vom Slowenischen Institut für Zeitgeschichte sowie Nina Kraus und Klara Schwalbe von der International Students of History Association. Weitere Projekte wurden vorgestellt durch den Verein Gegen Vergessen-Für Demokratie, vertreten durch Ruth Wunnicke, die Volkshochschule München, vertreten durch Dr. Robert Mucha, sowie die Arbeitsgruppe Nordhessen-Südniedersachsen von Gegen Vergessen-Für Demokratie e.V., vertreten durch Ernst Klein Zum Abschluss der Veranstaltung präsentierten Bernd Buder vom Filmfestival Cottbus, Dr. Regina Bouchehri von Looksfilm TV sowie die Film- und Videoproduzenten Loretta Walz und Gerald Grote sowie Claus Oppermann ihre Projekte.