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Start Artist Song Time Album Year The Last Dinner Party Prelude To Ecstasy 1:34 Prelude To Ecstasy 2024 0:01:34 The Last Dinner Party Burn Alive 3:16 Prelude To Ecstasy 2024 0:06:00 Cathubodua The Mirror 2:48 Interbellum 2024 0:08:48 Aftertime Sons Of Fenrir 4:20 Arcane Horizons 2024 0:13:08 Black Sun Rise 3:40 Black Sun 2024 0:16:48 […]
The 1807 Treaty with Tripoli ended the First Barbary War, allowing American ships to sail freely in the Mediterranean without tribute payments. This victory spurred national pride, with many Americans viewing the war as a continuation of their revolutionary ideals. However, new challenges emerged in the Atlantic as the Napoleonic Wars intensified, pressuring U.S. trade. Jefferson's attempt to protect American neutrality through an embargo on Britain and France faced domestic resistance and ultimately proved ineffective. Tensions boiled over with the Chesapeake-Leopard Affair, where a British warship attacked the U.S. Chesapeake, pushing the nations closer to conflict. In the Mediterranean, American withdrawals left U.S. ships vulnerable, leading to renewed pirate attacks that forced the U.S. to resume tribute payments. Jefferson's preference for a small, defensive fleet backfired, and America soon found itself unable to protect its Mediterranean interests. By 1812, escalating disputes with Britain led the U.S. to declare war, hoping British preoccupation with France would offer an advantage. American victories, particularly the USS Constitution's successes and the Battle of New Orleans, bolstered U.S. morale. The Treaty of Ghent ended the War of 1812 without territorial gains, but American resilience was solidified, and the British eventually ceased impressing American sailors.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The 1807 Treaty with Tripoli ended the First Barbary War, allowing American ships to sail freely in the Mediterranean without tribute payments. This victory spurred national pride, with many Americans viewing the war as a continuation of their revolutionary ideals. However, new challenges emerged in the Atlantic as the Napoleonic Wars intensified, pressuring U.S. trade. Jefferson's attempt to protect American neutrality through an embargo on Britain and France faced domestic resistance and ultimately proved ineffective. Tensions boiled over with the Chesapeake-Leopard Affair, where a British warship attacked the U.S. Chesapeake, pushing the nations closer to conflict. In the Mediterranean, American withdrawals left U.S. ships vulnerable, leading to renewed pirate attacks that forced the U.S. to resume tribute payments. Jefferson's preference for a small, defensive fleet backfired, and America soon found itself unable to protect its Mediterranean interests. By 1812, escalating disputes with Britain led the U.S. to declare war, hoping British preoccupation with France would offer an advantage. American victories, particularly the USS Constitution's successes and the Battle of New Orleans, bolstered U.S. morale. The Treaty of Ghent ended the War of 1812 without territorial gains, but American resilience was solidified, and the British eventually ceased impressing American sailors.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today, the words “federalism” and “originalism” are bandied about in the news almost daily, but to get at the underpinnings of these modern interpretations of constitutional law, it is essential to look at how the Constitution was being interpreted and applied during the crucial period of 1815-1861, between the end of the War of 1812 and the beginning of the Civil War.Early nineteenth-century Americans found themselves consumed by arguments about concurrent power—the areas in which the Constitution had left the line between federal and state authority unclear. The scope of specific concurrent powers became increasingly important, and controversial, in the early nineteenth century. In 1815, the most pressing political and legal issues increasingly concerned situations in which multiple layers of governmental power overlapped—and the Constitution provided no clear delineation. Moreover, the choice of which level of government regulated each subject had dramatic consequences for the policy that resulted.To explore this topic is today's guest, Alison LaCroix, author of “The Interbellum Constitution: Union, Commerce, and Slavery in the Age of Federalisms.” We see just how deeply these constitutional questions dominated the discourse of the time.
Al 75 jaar rekenen de Europese landen via de NAVO op bescherming door de Verenigde Staten. Het Noord-Atlantisch Verdrag had een wederzijds strategisch belang. Toch zijn er ook genoeg momenten geweest dat de belangen binnen het bondgenootschap op z'n zachts gezegd uiteenliepen. Europa voelde er bijvoorbeeld niets voor om Amerika te helpen bij hun wereldwijde strijd tegen het communisme. Maar ondanks verdeeldheid op tal van terreinen is er toch altijd eensgezindheid geweest over de noodzaak elkaars grondgebied gezamenlijk te verdedigen. In deze aflevering van De Atlantische Blik duikt eindredacteur Maarten Muns de geschiedenis van de NAVO in, samen met historicus Ivo van de Wijdeven. Ze bespreken de historische context van het Europa van direct na de Tweede Wereldoorlog, hoe de NAVO zich door verschillende crises heensloeg, hoe het zichzelf opnieuw uitvond na het ‘interbellum' tussen 1989 en 2022 en waar we nu – in medio 2024 - staan.
Federalism may seem inherent in the United States constitution, but it is a concept that has seen constant refinement, particularly in the interbellum period of the early 1800s. On this episode, Dr. Alison LaCroix discussed her book, The Interbellum Constitution.
In this episode, political theorist William B. Allen, editor and translator of a new edition of Montesquieu's The Spirit of the Laws, and Alison LaCroix, author of The Interbellum Constitution: Union, Commerce, and Slavery in the Age of Federalisms, join Jeffrey Rosen to explore the intellectual foundations—from Montesquieu and beyond—of constitutional interpretation from the founding to the Civil War. They also discuss historical practice and tradition in interpreting the Constitution throughout the interbellum period, and how this history applies to debates over constitutional interpretation today. This program was streamed live on June 17, 2024, as part of our America's Town Hall series. Resources: • Alison LaCroix, The Interbellum Constitution: Union, Commerce, and Slavery in the Age of Federalisms, 2024 • Montesquieu, ‘The Spirit of the Laws': A Critical Edition, edited and translated by W. B. Allen, 2024 • The Commerce Clause • Alison LaCroix, “James Madison v. Originalism,” Project Syndicate (Aug. 26, 2022) • 10th Amendment • Andrew Jackson, Proclamation Regarding Nullification, (December 10, 1832) • Martin v. Hunter's Lessee (1816) • Preamble to the Constitution Questions or comments about the show? Email us at podcast@constitutioncenter.org. Continue today's conversation on Facebook and Twitter using@ConstitutionCtr. Sign up to receive Constitution Weekly, our email roundup of constitutional news and debate, at bit.ly/constitutionweekly. You can find transcripts for each episode on the podcast pages in our Media Library.
Jelle van Baardewijk in gesprek met wijlen Frits Boterman over diens boek ‘Tussen utopie en crisis.' Gesprek van 23 april 2022. -- Kom op 28 juni naar De Nacht van De Nieuwe Wereld. Bestel je kaarten hier: https://dnw.eventgoose.com/ Bestel het boek hier: https://www.singeluitgeverijen.nl/de-arbeiderspers/boek/tussen-utopie-en-crisis/
In this episode, Alison L. LaCroix, Robert Newton Reid Professor of Law, Associate Member of the Department of History at the University of Chicago Law School, discusses her new book, "The Interbellum Constitution: Union, Commerce, and Slavery in the Age of Federalisms," which is published by Yale University Press. LaCroix explains what made interbellum America unique and what we can learn from interbellum constitutional thought. She describes the unique features of interbellum constitutional ideology and reflects on what it can tell us about constitutional thought today.This episode was hosted by Brian L. Frye, Spears-Gilbert Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of Law. Frye is on Twitter at @brianlfrye. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
00:00 Intro, game overview 01:49 Game Highlights 03:26 Game Comparisons 04:25 Peer Review 05:20 My First Impressions
Migratie is van alle tijden. En die stelling geldt niet in het minst voor de Afro-Amerikaanse gemeenschap in de Verenigde Staten. In deze aflevering van de podcast neem ik jullie nog maar eens mee op reis. Het wordt een verhaal van miserie en ellende, maar ook een verhaal over hoop en dromen! We reizen door de tijd, en we reizen over zee en over land. We reizen om te leren, en bereid je maar meteen voor op een heel lange reis, want bij de voorbereiding van deze aflevering werd me nog maar eens duidelijk: het verhaal van de blues is van meet af aan een verhaal van migratie. Maak je dus klaar voor niet één, en ook niet twee, maar liefst drie goed gevulde afleveringen! In deze tweede aflevering van "Migration Blues" leggen we de focus op de migratie tijdens het interbellum. Nieuwsgierig naar meer? Volg "Into the Soul of the Blues" op Facebook, Instagram of Twitter. Of bezoek www.souloftheblues.be --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/bart-massaer/message
Mike DiLisio takes a look at the expansion for Furnace! 0:00 Intro 0:52 Overview 7:25 Final Thoughts
In the third installment of my Greco-Persian war series we take a look at the Interbellum. The years between Marathon and Thermopylae. A pivotal decade for both Greek and Persian alike.Alliances were an incredibly shaky proposition in ancient Greece but they would need something rock solid if they were to resist the coming enemy. We look at the Athenian naval build up during the period, the result of the visionary called Themistocles.Fortunately for the allies, Sparta had at her command the Peloponnesian League but the city of Lycurgus had two very new kings, with unstable thrones, in power at the time. They missed Marathon, Greece could not afford for them to miss what came next.Lastly, we'll head east and go into the detail around the build up of Xerxes' forces in Persia. He assembled a mighty army and navy, and the steps he took to get them to Greece were nothing short of astounding.I hope you all enjoy, and take good care. CONTRIBUTE HEREhttps://www.buymeacoffee.com/spartanhistoryhttps://paypal.me/SpartanHistoryFIND ME HEREhttps://www.facebook.com/spartanhistorypodcasthttps://twitter.com/Spartan_History
O que acontece quando se soma um juramento de vingança feito em sangue com vastos recursos, lealdade absoluta de um exército e estratégia impecável? Conheça o maior pesadelo de Roma: Hannibal. Veja bem. Mais. Epis citadosVBMais 74 - Identidade Nacional VB 07 - Liderança Referências: Do epi 21- Interbellum até epi 23b —The War With Hannibal --podcast, The History of Rome Hannibal (PARTS 1 - 5) Second Punic War– vídeo, YouTube Hannibal (PARTS 6 - 10) Second Punic War– vídeo, YouTube Hannibal (PARTS 11 - 13) Second Punic War– vídeo, YouTube Rome: The Punic Wars - The Second Punic War Begins - Extra History - #2 – vídeo, YouTube Rome: The Punic Wars - The Second Punic War Rages On - Extra History - #3 – vídeo, YouTube Total War History: The First Punic War – vídeo, YouTube Hannibal: Rome's Worst Nightmare (BBC) – vídeo, YouTube Seunda Guera Púnica - Wikipedia Encontre-nos também no: Instagram (@vejabempodcast), Facebook, e YouTube.
O que acontece quando se soma um juramento de vingança feito em sangue com vastos recursos, lealdade absoluta de um exército e estratégia impecável? Conheça o maior pesadelo de Roma: Hannibal. Veja bem. Mais. Padrim (https://www.padrim.com.br/vejabempodcast) – Código PIX: e3257213-46ea-4c97-9740-4c6f268baa0f Epis citados VBMais 74 – Identidade Nacional VB 07 – Liderança Referências: Do epi 21- Interbellum até epi 23b —The War With Hannibal –podcast, The […]
Tim, Frank en Jonne duiden de koers van afgelopen week. De Dauphine gaf een aantal mooi inzichten maar zorgde ook voor een hoop vraagtekens. We blikken terug en vooruit want alles staat al in het teken van de Tour. Uiteraard komt Ivo Niehe ook uitgebreid aan bod. Viel SpassDe Rode Lantaarn gaat live in Tivoli! Bestel kaartjes via tivolivredenburg.nl.Veel dank aan onze sponsoren Toto, Canyon en Auto.nl.Zie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Jelle van Baardewijk in gesprek met auteur Frits Boterman over diens boek ‘Tussen utopie en crisis.'
We're in the Interbellum. While one half of the world was done with war, the other half was gearing up for the new one.
Welkom bij Geschiedenis van België en welkom bij deze tweede aflevering over het Interbellum. Over de tweede helft van het Interbellum eigenlijk en ja die is even, zo niet verwarrender dan de eerste helft. Er gebeurt zoveel tegelijkertijd dat het moeilijk is om door het bos de bomen te zien. Al is het eindpunt wel duidelijk Wereldoorlog II. Vandaag zetten we de laatste stappen naar die oorlog en hebben we het over de Grote depressie, veel te veel regeringen, verkiezingen, Vlaams-nationalisten, fascisten, sociale hervormingen en een financiële crisis van formaat. Dat en nog veel meer in deze aflevering van Geschiedenis van België. Afbeelding: Mars Verdinaso
Welkom bij Geschiedenis van België en welkom bij deze eerste aflevering over het Interbellum. U weet wel, die periode tussen de twee wereldoorlogen waarin de hele wereld eventjes heropleefde, om zich daarna in een lange spiraal richting wereldoorlog II te werpen. Dat internationale verhaal wel, daar gaan we het eigenlijk amper over hebben. Want dat hebt u naar alle waarschijnlijkheid wel al gehoord of gezien. Nee, wij gaan het hebben over het Belgische verhaal. Over hoe België vlak na de oorlog opnieuw één van de meest progressieve landen ter wereld werd maar tegelijkertijd fouten maakte die het zuur zouden opbreken. Vandaag hebben we het dan ook over de acht uren werkdag, een Belgische inval in Duitsland, amnestie, een opeenvolging van regeringen en de vernederlandsing van de Gentse universiteit. Dat en nog veel meer in deze aflevering van Geschiedenis van België.
De leerlingen van Moordale hebben nog steeds vragen over seksualiteit alle soorten en maten, maar krijgen nu seksuele voorlichting uit het interbellum. Adam is een jaloers vriendje en Eric kijkt uit naar een week Nigeria. En wie oh wie betaalde Meave's schooltrip?✨ Je kunt seizoen 3 van Sex Education kijken op Netflix. De hoofdrollen worden gespeeld door Asa Butterfield (Otis), Gillian Anderson (Jean Milburn), Ncuti Gatwa (Eric) en Emma Mackey (Maeve). We maakten eerder een aflevering over seizoen 1 & 2 samen met Nydia en Marie-Lotte van podcast Damn Honey. Die kan je hier luisteren (of scroll naar beneden in je podcast app): https://vriendvandeshow.nl/vierkanteogen/episodes/sex-education-recap-ft-damn-honey✨ De Vierkante Ogen Show wordt gemaakt door Anna Luna Post, Sicco de Knecht en Esther Crabbendam. Deze aflevering werd ge-edit door Esther Crabbendam. Eindredactie door Tim de Gier. Muziek door KLOAQ. De Vierkante Ogen Show is een podcast van Dag & Nacht media.➡️ Volg de show of laat een berichtje achter op https://vriendvandeshow.nl/vierkanteogen➡️ Volg ons op twitter: @vierkanteogensw @AnnaLunaPost @SiccodeKnecht @EzstherZie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Trailer for their second episode of Arc 3, where Boris takes TENE on a tour of an underappreciated part of American history - the Italian-American Fascists of the interwar period. They look at the largely forgotten story of Mussolini's supporters in the US as well as the brutal uphill struggle against them. Boris describes spectacular street battles and assassinations that seem more cinematic than real as Rey and Fritz get to know their fascinating participants. Meet early fascist Joseph Di Silvestro, leader of 300,000-strong Sons of Italy organization in America which he (tried to) pledged to Mussolini. Learn about Edmondo Rossoni, the IWW organizer who helped invent fascist corporatism in Italy. Gawk at the befeathered WASP "Khaki Shirt" supporters of fascist Italy and swoon for charming celebrity anarchist, Carlo Tresca. And don't forget the hapless failson of Gabriele D'Annunzio, Hugo! Also: Mussolini and the American media, brick fights at the opera, how the invasion of Ethiopia affected Harlem, and the boys accidentally join the Fascist League of North America. This is The Empire Never Ended, the Antifascist Amerikanski-Balkan podcast about (neo) fascist terror, the (deep) state and the alienation, nihilism and desperation produced by the capitalist system. And how to get rid of all that. Something like that... Subscribe to our Patreon for weekly premium episodes! And check out our social media for updates and whatnot: Twitter + Facebook + Instagram + YouTube
At around 11am on Thursday 18 February 1943 two students in Munich were arrested for distributing anti-Nazi pamphlets. By Monday they had been interrogated, tried, and executed along with another member of the resistance circle. Further arrests followed. From 15-27 February 2021 the White Rose Project will be following the events as they happened in real time through daily posts on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram. This year marks the 78th anniversary of the first White Rose trials. It's also a year when the dates and days of the week coincide. Imagine going about your normal routine on Monday, being arrested on Thursday, being interrogated over the weekend, and going to trial the following Monday morning. At the heart of our week is a live reading of the White Rose's resistance pamphlets, translated from German into English by student members of the White Rose Project. Dr Alex Lloyd (Fellow by Special Election in German, St Edmund Hall) will give a short introduction to the pamphlets. The readers are current and former students and academics, mirroring the membership of the original group: Sophie Caws, Eve Mason, Adam Rebick, Elba Slamecka, Sam Thompson, Amy Wilkinson, and Taylor Professor Emeritus of German Language and Literature, T.J. (Jim) Reed, FBA. The event will open and close with music by the award-winning vocal ensemble SANSARA, recorded on 22 February 2020. This event is supported by The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH) and the University of Oxford's Public Engagement with Research Seed Fund. It is part of the White Rose Project, a research and public engagement initiative bringing the story of the White Rose resistance circle to English-speaking audiences. Dr Alexandra Lloyd is Fellow by Special Election in German at St Edmund Hall, Oxford. She has published widely on post-war Germany, most recently in her book Childhood, Memory, and the Nation: Young Lives under Nazism in Contemporary German Culture (Legenda, 2020). She is currently a Knowledge Exchange Fellow at TORCH working with the White Rose Foundation in Munich, and is Project Lead on a Public Engagement with Research Seed Fund project, ‘Resistance: The Story of the White Rose', in collaboration with the award-winning vocal ensemble SANSARA. Eve Mason is a final-year student of English and German at the Queen's College, Oxford. Her passion for translation led her to the White Rose Project, where she was one of the original translators of the pamphlets for The White Rose: Reading, Writing, Resistance. She was awarded a prize for German in the Warwick Prize in Undergraduate Translation in 2019 and has gone on to self-publish A String of Pearls: A Collection of Five German Fairy Tales by Women Writers, for which she won the LIDL Year Abroad Project Prize 2019–20. Sophie Caws is a final year student of French and German at St Edmund Hall, Oxford. After taking German as a beginner's language, she now studies modern German literature with Dr Lloyd, with a particular interest in Freudian psychology and the literature of the former GDR. She spent 9 months living in Leipzig, Germany, where she worked as an English Language Assistant with the British Council and a teacher of English as a Second Language. She was also involved in English-language community theatre with English Theatre Leipzig, with the aim of promoting intercultural linguistic and artistic exchange within the Leipzig community and beyond. Sam Thompson is a fourth-year PhD student at King's College London, where he is completing a thesis on Classical Reception in German-language exile literature, 1933-45. Sam previously studied Classics and German at Magdalen College, Oxford, where he also received an MSt in German (with a dissertation on Austrian memory literature). His recent research interests include the work of Bertolt Brecht, Lion Feuchtwanger and Anna Seghers, and Interbellum literature more broadly.
At around 11am on Thursday 18 February 1943 two students in Munich were arrested for distributing anti-Nazi pamphlets. By Monday they had been interrogated, tried, and executed along with another member of the resistance circle. Further arrests followed. From 15-27 February 2021 the White Rose Project will be following the events as they happened in real time through daily posts on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram. This year marks the 78th anniversary of the first White Rose trials. It’s also a year when the dates and days of the week coincide. Imagine going about your normal routine on Monday, being arrested on Thursday, being interrogated over the weekend, and going to trial the following Monday morning. At the heart of our week is a live reading of the White Rose’s resistance pamphlets, translated from German into English by student members of the White Rose Project. Dr Alex Lloyd (Fellow by Special Election in German, St Edmund Hall) will give a short introduction to the pamphlets. The readers are current and former students and academics, mirroring the membership of the original group: Sophie Caws, Eve Mason, Adam Rebick, Elba Slamecka, Sam Thompson, Amy Wilkinson, and Taylor Professor Emeritus of German Language and Literature, T.J. (Jim) Reed, FBA. The event will open and close with music by the award-winning vocal ensemble SANSARA, recorded on 22 February 2020. This event is supported by The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH) and the University of Oxford’s Public Engagement with Research Seed Fund. It is part of the White Rose Project, a research and public engagement initiative bringing the story of the White Rose resistance circle to English-speaking audiences. Dr Alexandra Lloyd is Fellow by Special Election in German at St Edmund Hall, Oxford. She has published widely on post-war Germany, most recently in her book Childhood, Memory, and the Nation: Young Lives under Nazism in Contemporary German Culture (Legenda, 2020). She is currently a Knowledge Exchange Fellow at TORCH working with the White Rose Foundation in Munich, and is Project Lead on a Public Engagement with Research Seed Fund project, ‘Resistance: The Story of the White Rose’, in collaboration with the award-winning vocal ensemble SANSARA. Eve Mason is a final-year student of English and German at the Queen’s College, Oxford. Her passion for translation led her to the White Rose Project, where she was one of the original translators of the pamphlets for The White Rose: Reading, Writing, Resistance. She was awarded a prize for German in the Warwick Prize in Undergraduate Translation in 2019 and has gone on to self-publish A String of Pearls: A Collection of Five German Fairy Tales by Women Writers, for which she won the LIDL Year Abroad Project Prize 2019–20. Sophie Caws is a final year student of French and German at St Edmund Hall, Oxford. After taking German as a beginner’s language, she now studies modern German literature with Dr Lloyd, with a particular interest in Freudian psychology and the literature of the former GDR. She spent 9 months living in Leipzig, Germany, where she worked as an English Language Assistant with the British Council and a teacher of English as a Second Language. She was also involved in English-language community theatre with English Theatre Leipzig, with the aim of promoting intercultural linguistic and artistic exchange within the Leipzig community and beyond. Sam Thompson is a fourth-year PhD student at King’s College London, where he is completing a thesis on Classical Reception in German-language exile literature, 1933-45. Sam previously studied Classics and German at Magdalen College, Oxford, where he also received an MSt in German (with a dissertation on Austrian memory literature). His recent research interests include the work of Bertolt Brecht, Lion Feuchtwanger and Anna Seghers, and Interbellum literature more broadly.
At around 11am on Thursday 18 February 1943 two students in Munich were arrested for distributing anti-Nazi pamphlets. By Monday they had been interrogated, tried, and executed along with another member of the resistance circle. Further arrests followed. From 15-27 February 2021 the White Rose Project will be following the events as they happened in real time through daily posts on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram. This year marks the 78th anniversary of the first White Rose trials. It’s also a year when the dates and days of the week coincide. Imagine going about your normal routine on Monday, being arrested on Thursday, being interrogated over the weekend, and going to trial the following Monday morning. At the heart of our week is a live reading of the White Rose’s resistance pamphlets, translated from German into English by student members of the White Rose Project. Dr Alex Lloyd (Fellow by Special Election in German, St Edmund Hall) will give a short introduction to the pamphlets. The readers are current and former students and academics, mirroring the membership of the original group: Sophie Caws, Eve Mason, Adam Rebick, Elba Slamecka, Sam Thompson, Amy Wilkinson, and Taylor Professor Emeritus of German Language and Literature, T.J. (Jim) Reed, FBA. The event will open and close with music by the award-winning vocal ensemble SANSARA, recorded on 22 February 2020. This event is supported by The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH) and the University of Oxford’s Public Engagement with Research Seed Fund. It is part of the White Rose Project, a research and public engagement initiative bringing the story of the White Rose resistance circle to English-speaking audiences. Dr Alexandra Lloyd is Fellow by Special Election in German at St Edmund Hall, Oxford. She has published widely on post-war Germany, most recently in her book Childhood, Memory, and the Nation: Young Lives under Nazism in Contemporary German Culture (Legenda, 2020). She is currently a Knowledge Exchange Fellow at TORCH working with the White Rose Foundation in Munich, and is Project Lead on a Public Engagement with Research Seed Fund project, ‘Resistance: The Story of the White Rose’, in collaboration with the award-winning vocal ensemble SANSARA. Eve Mason is a final-year student of English and German at the Queen’s College, Oxford. Her passion for translation led her to the White Rose Project, where she was one of the original translators of the pamphlets for The White Rose: Reading, Writing, Resistance. She was awarded a prize for German in the Warwick Prize in Undergraduate Translation in 2019 and has gone on to self-publish A String of Pearls: A Collection of Five German Fairy Tales by Women Writers, for which she won the LIDL Year Abroad Project Prize 2019–20. Sophie Caws is a final year student of French and German at St Edmund Hall, Oxford. After taking German as a beginner’s language, she now studies modern German literature with Dr Lloyd, with a particular interest in Freudian psychology and the literature of the former GDR. She spent 9 months living in Leipzig, Germany, where she worked as an English Language Assistant with the British Council and a teacher of English as a Second Language. She was also involved in English-language community theatre with English Theatre Leipzig, with the aim of promoting intercultural linguistic and artistic exchange within the Leipzig community and beyond. Sam Thompson is a fourth-year PhD student at King’s College London, where he is completing a thesis on Classical Reception in German-language exile literature, 1933-45. Sam previously studied Classics and German at Magdalen College, Oxford, where he also received an MSt in German (with a dissertation on Austrian memory literature). His recent research interests include the work of Bertolt Brecht, Lion Feuchtwanger and Anna Seghers, and Interbellum literature more broadly.
Jan Mom spreekt regisseur Joram Lürsen over de nieuwe serie 'Vliegende Hollanders'. Vliegende Hollanders speelt zich af tijdens de begindagen van onze commerciële luchtvaart. Vliegtuigbouwer Anthony Fokker (Fedja van Huêt) en oprichter van de KLM Albert Plesman (Daan Schuurmans) waren als luchtvaartpioniers onlosmakelijk met elkaar verbonden. Hoewel hun karakters als dag en nacht van elkaar verschilden, slaagden ze er samen in om Nederland tijdens het Interbellum tot een belangrijke speler te maken op het wereldtoneel van de luchtvaart. Wat de internetrevolutie tegenwoordig betekent voor de mensheid, betekende de opkomst van de luchtvaart toen.
Tijdens deze aflevering bekijken we het conflict tussen Rome en haar barbaarse noorderburen. Door de immer uitbreidende Romeinse republiek komt het barbaarse leefgebied in gevaar. Een coalitie van barbaarse stammen uit de Po-vlakte moet de Romeinse expansie stoppen, de zuidelijke landen plunderen en net als Brennus terugkeren uit Latium met ongekende rijkdommen.Rome en haar onderdanen lopen hernieuwd gevaar. Een gevecht voor de beschaving zelve zorgt voor een eensgezindheid onder Rome en haar bondgenoten die zich tot op heden nog niet als zodanig heeft laten zien. (230 - 222 v. Chr.)Hier vind je een link naar de website.Hier vind je een link naar de Facebookpagina.
Tijdens deze aflevering volgen we de ontwikkelingen aan de andere kant van de Adriatische zee waar een bandietenstaat zorgt voor kopzorgen in Epirus en een opleving van de piraterij die de handelsroutes tussen het Italiaanse schiereiland en de Griekse wereld in gevaar brengen. Wanneer ook Rome schade ondervindt van deze praktijken worden gezanten gestuurd die nooit zullen terugkeren. Het leger van de Republiek landt voor het eerst aan de andere zijde van de Adriatische zee (241-228 v. Chr).Hier vind je een link naar de website.Hier vind je een link naar de Facebookpagina.
The story of A Song of Ice and Fire and Game of Thrones begins in an interbellum period, meaning: a period between two great wars. Looking back, there are interesting parallels between the first part of the story and the view towards the White Walkers and the views that some politicians in Europe espoused to avoid another conflict at all cost. Rutger and Gil discuss the similarities as well as the historical lessons. Visit our website: https://www.ourpodacademy.com To become a friend of the show: https://patreon.com/podacademy For a one-time donation: https://www.paypal.me/gotacademy Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/OurPodAcademy
Interbellum gesprek met Lynn Berger (1984), werkzaam bij de Correspondent voor het onderwerp ‘Cultuur en Clichés’. Wat zijn onopvallende zaken die van grote invloed zijn op ons dagelijks doen en denken? Welke blinde vlekken ontstaan er als iedereen maar dezelfde onderwerpen blijft herhalen? Wat zijn onderwerpen die er niet om liegen en juist een nieuwe generatie wakker houden? Kan de provincie hiermee als een feniks oprijzen uit haar stoffige imago? Het gesprek bevat een opvallend pleidooi voor onderhoud in plaats van innovatie. "Ga maar een lintje doorknippen na grote onderhoudswerkzaamheden, als alles er weer precies zo uitziet als daarvoor: dát is belangrijk. Klik HIER voor het bijhorend artikel van Lynn uit de Correspondent. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/paul-roncken/message
Interbellum gesprek met landschapsarchitect Paul Plambeck, werkzaam bij bureau Sant en Co. Projectleider van de omvangrijke studie naar een vernieuwd perspectief op het Groene Hart. Als bodemdaling al 1000 jaar plaatsvindt, waarom is het dan opeens zo urgent? Begrijpen agrariërs, natuurbeschermers en landschapsexperts elkaar goed genoeg? Wat is nu een toekomst om van te dromen? Een gesprek over aangepaste kerntaken voor landbouw, bebouwing en natuur door klimaatveranderingen in het Groene Hart. De studie naar het Groene Hart is opgesteld in opdracht van de drie Provinciaal Adviseur Ruimtelijke Kwaliteit Harm Veenenbos - Provincie Zuid-Holland, Paul Roncken - Provincie Utrecht en Steven Slabbers - Provincie Noord-Holland in samenwerking met provinciale ontwerpers en adviseurs. Uitgevoerd door Sant en Co en in samenwerking met Rens Wijnakker - FABRICations, Theo Vogelzang - Wageningen Economic Research, Erik Jansen - Veenweide Innovatie Centrum, Gilles Erkens - Deltares en Marlies Feringa en Patricia Braaksma - Stuurgroep Groene Hart. Regionale uitwerkingen door Vista landschapsarchitecten, Flux landschapsarchitecten en Peter de Ruyter, landschapsarchitectuur. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/paul-roncken/message
Interbellum gesprek met prof. dr. Noelle Aarts, een Nederlands deskundige op het gebied van conflict, onderhandeling en communicatie, Instituut voor Science in Society (ISiS), Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen. Waarom is participatie ook alweer nodig en wat is de kwaliteit van participatie in recente voorbeelden? Wat zijn belangrijke voorwaarden voor een effectief participatieproces? En hoe moet de communicatie binnen participatieprocessen worden ingericht? Wat is de rol van social media? Staat de provincie iets te wachten of mag ze meer op afstand blijven van burgers? --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/paul-roncken/message
Deze tweede aflevering begint net na 11 november 1918. De Tramway Bruxellois herstelt moeilijk van de Eerste Wereldoorlog. Het rollend materiaal is in slechte staat en het personeel eist betere werkomstandigheden. Tijdens deze periode besluit de Tramway Bruxellois te moderniseren: intern maar ook en vooral op het terrein. Het moet gezegd dat alles perfect moet zijn om de miljoenen bezoekers van de Wereldtentoonstelling van 1935 te kunnen ontvangen op de gloednieuwe Heizelvlakte. In Europa winnen extreemrechtse gedachten echter terrein. De voorbode van een nieuwe wereldoorlog laat zich voelen. Lijn 150 is de podcast van de MIVB, de Maatschappij voor Intercommunaal Vervoer te Brussel. De tram viert dit jaar zijn 150ste verjaardag in Brussel en daarom hebben we besloten zijn geschiedenis te vertellen via deze reeks podcasts. Wil je hier meer over weten? Ontdek alle info over de feestelijkheden rond 150 jaar tram. Afspraak van 1 tot 5 mei in Brussel voor de ontdekking van de geschiedenis van de tram. Over deze podcast Abonneer je via Apple Podcast, Spotify of PocketCasts. Blijf op de hoogte van het nieuws over de MIVB door ons te volgen op Twitter, Facebook of Instagram. Volg #tram150 op de sociale media.
The Random history of Belgium continues the Interbellum timeframe leading up to the start of the war for Belgium. Forts, plans, neutrality and the first attacks. 1939 up to May 1940. This is part 2, please listen to EP56 first, where you'll get part 1
The Random history of Belgium starts to explore World War II in Belgium. In this first episode (of a longer series) we'll start with the interbellum (the period in time between the two World Wars). The economics, and aftermath of WWI along with 1923 Ruhr crisis.
Vanuit de heropening van het hotel in 1950 kijken de Schillers terug op de oude wereld van het Interbellum. Frits Schiller herinnert zich zijn vader, een Duits emigrant. Hij, zijn broer Hein en zus Elsa blikken terug op hun jeugd in het dranklokaal, de invloed van hun vader en de belangrijke levenskeuze die Frits moet maken als zijn vader sterft: wordt hij kunstschilder of hotelier?
In honor of Palm Sunday, this episode features an excerpt from Jacqueline Shohet Kahanoff's Jacob's Ladder. Born in Cairo in 1917, the author depicts life in Egypt between the two world wars in the novel, which was published in 1951, before she settled in Israel. Here is an excerpt from the novel: Miss O’Brien had felt the child’s hand stiffen in hers, and Rachel’s unseemly interest in the beggar boy moved her. The child might be loved and spoiled, but she must be unbearably lonely if she cared for such a dirty little scamp. At first when everything in Egypt was strange, new, and often shocked her, Miss O’Brien had followed Alice’s instructions and the advice of other nurses that children must be kept away from all that smacked of native life, but now this seemed cruel to her. Text: Jacqueline Shohet Kahanoff, from Jacob’s Ladder in Keys to the Garden. New Israeli Writing. Ed. by Ammiel Alcalay. City Lights, 1996.
This week we look at the Hamilcar's invasion of Spain. We examine the situation in Spain, and Hamilcar's motives. We look in detail about why it is unlikely Hamilcar was plotting revenge. Featuring as a special guest Ray Harris of the History Of WWII Podcast.
This week we look at the Mercenary War in Carthage, as well as including a special feature. 10 minutes of the first 'Project History Cage Match', staring myself, Jamie Jeffers, Roifield Brown, Zack Twamley and Ray Harris.
This week topics discussed include classic moments in English football comentary and the European economy in 1946. We also get into Rome's invasions of Sardina, Illyria and the Po Valley.