POPULARITY
NOTE: SHOW LINKS FOR ALL THE MENTIONED PODCASTERS WILL BE ADDED SOON (AND WILL ALSO BE IN THE NOTES FOR NEXT EPISODE TO ENSURE THEY GET SEEN), FOR NOW GETTING THIS OUT WHILE I CAN! TRANSCRIPT: Good Evening Everyone, Welcome to Popeular History. My name is Gregg, and this is another admin update I'll try to keep from being too boring, in part by offering some observations and speculations about the new Papacy interspersed throughout. First, some personal updates. I was very tired by the end of last week, thank you for asking. I got some rest and then made sure Vice-Pope Mrs. Popeular History's primary Mother's Day present was rest. I am immeasurably grateful for her support, but the reality is even if she weren't so supportive of this passion project of mine and the fairly unhinged extremes I took it to in the last few weeks, I would still be immeasurably grateful to her for a million other things. She's the best partner I could have ever hoped to have for so many reasons, and all of you are welcome to be jealous. I'd also like to thank my children for being malleable enough that I can pass on my love of the faith in general and also my nerdiness to them. Patrick, Catherine, Joseph, William, Gabriel, I love you all and thank you for sharing me with the internet a bit more lately. I try to shield my children from my more concentrated geekery so they can have somewhat normal childhoods, much like I try to spare my Vice Pope so she can have a somewhat normal marriage, but I will admit I felt a special sense of pride when I heard footsteps after I had invited any of my children interested in appearing on one of my livestreams to come on down to the studio. Those footsteps were from Catherine, who was by that point a good hour and a half into a livestream of the Pope's funeral that had began at 4am our time. To be clear, the kids aren't usually up at that time–I mean, neither am I–but wanting to be on the livestream she had asked to be awakened when it began, so I woke her and set her up with a watching station before kicking things off. Days later, she still excitedly references things from it. Just one of many special times from the last couple weeks. My thanks go not only to my immediate household, but to my family beyond as well, in particular my father, who came over at another particularly uncivil hour and summoned black smoke basically as soon as he arrived so I could go rest, as well as my in-laws, who bore with me through a packed weekend of a wedding and a papal funeral. And again, Vice Pope-Mrs Popeular history through it all. Thanks are due as well to the lovely and supportive folks at work. I wouldn't want to name anyone who would rather I not name them, so I will be general when I say the atmosphere there has been lovely, and in particular I appreciate those who knew I was their best local source for answers to questions about Popes and Cardinals and conclaves and such. I lead a charmed life these days, and work, from my team to my coworkers to those above me and those supporting me, is full of amazing people I could not appreciate more. Before I thank even more people, including you the listeners, let's talk about the New Pope, Leo XIV, specifically, his status as an American. And please, I beg you, don't be one of the contrarians who have been trying to make “United Statesian” a thing, it's fine to call Leo XIV the First American Pope. Of course you're welcome to use the opportunity to draw attention to the fact that Pope Francis is also from “the Americas”, but “American” is the demonym for a person from the United States and there is nothing wrong with using that word in that sense, so stop trying to make fetch happen. Anyways, Pope Leo was born on September 14, 1955, in Chicago, Illinois. The date is memorable for Catholics as the Triumph of the Cross, one of the more venerable feasts of the Church, commemorating Emperor Constantine's mother Saint Helena's apparently successful expedition to the Holy Land in search of the Cross Christ was crucified on, AKA the True Cross. Of course, many of my listeners are more captivated by the Chicago aspect, so let's hone in on that. First, to get this out of the way, yes, he was raised in Dolton, a community just *outside* Chicago, but contrarians should brace for more disappointment as it remains technically correct to describe Robert Francis Prevost as being “from Chicago”, having been born at Mercy Hospital in the Bronzeville neighborhood on the south side. In a way, it would be somewhat surprising if Pope Leo *weren't* from the midwest, considering 80% of the 10 American Cardinals who participated in the conclave are midwesterners by birth. But also that number should actually closer to 90%, considering that's including the Irish-born Kevin Cardinal Farrell under the American tally, and by that logic the future Leo XIV should probably count as Peruvian. But I'm not gonna begrudge anyone who wants to claim the Pope as one of their own. Even without that wrinkle, I think we can agree Ireland can count as the midwest, especially given the whole Notre Dame thing. If it were tallied as its own nationality, the Midwestern United States would be the second most represented county in the conclave, still actually in the same place that the United States currently occupies: comfortably behind Italy, and a bit ahead of Brazil. Nor of course is Chicago unfamiliar to Cardinals in general, having had their senior cleric sporting a red hat–or getting one at the first opportunity–for over a hundred years running, putting them in extremely rarified air, actually I think they're the only US see that can claim the red hat century club when it's set on hard mode like that, as New York's Cardinal Dolan wasn't elevated at the first opportunity, presumably because Cardinal Egan was still kicking around and Conclave-eligible for a while, and Archbishop Henning of Boston just got passed over last December despite Cardinal O'Malley having freshly aged out. And my midwest Catholic trivia dump can't be complete without noting that spookily, Mar Awa III, the current Catholicos-Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East, which shares the spotlight on my upcoming 0.22 supplemental, was also born in Chicago, which may further help the ecumenical relations I discuss in that supplemental episode. Here's hoping! One more topic relating to Pope Leo's roots I want to touch on today: His Louisiana creole and black caribbean heritage. Both of His Holiness' grandparents on his mother's side were described as black or mulatto in census documents of their day, with his mother's father, Joseph Martinez, being listed as born in Santo Domingo, now the capital of the Dominican Republic, though it was then part of Haiti, the only country to have been born as the result of a successful slave rebellion, making black heritage from that region particularly poignant. I'll note that His Holiness' melanin levels are such that he can fairly be described as white passing, and I'd consider it unlikely that the matter was discussed during the recent conclave, though I expect then-Cardinal Prevost was aware of this bit of family history. That said, it's certainly *possible* that it was a surprise even to him. One way or another, the basic fact is that these genealogical records exist. What to make of them, I leave to those more competent than I. I will commit to circling back to the topic in time, though. For now, it's time to thank, like, a lot of podcasters. First and foremost, you probably wouldn't be listening to this if it weren't for Bry and Fry of Pontifacts. Their support has been critical in a number of ways and I could not be more appreciative of the way they've shared their platform with me, and so much more, right down to Bry making sure I checked my email when she saw that NPR had reached out for an interview. I tragically did not have Bry's attentive support on the inbox situation when PBS invited me on solo, so that one will always be a bit of a what-if, a hint of how much harder things are without the active support of so many. So again, thank you all, especially people I'm sure I'm forgetting since I'm extremely forgetful. I think the safest thing to do is to thank the rest of the podcasters who have collaborated with me in order of appearance this year, starting back in February with the Intelligent Speech crew, in particular my fellows on the religion panel discussion, namely Trevor Cully of the History of Persia Podcast as well as the cheekier America's Secret Wars podcast, Aurora of the Swords, Sorcery, and Socialism podcast, and Bailey of Totalus Jeffianus. What a panel we had. And oh, by the way, apparently I've got the green light to share both that and my talk on the Original Grey Eminence, François Leclerc du Tremblay on this feed, so watch out for that in due course. Oh, and uh, shoutout to David Montgomery of The Siecle for his help with French pronunciation this year, not to mention various other assists through the years. All errors are my own, and David is a good guy to know. Thank you to Jerry of The Presidencies podcast for having me on for one of his intro quotes, his process is impeccably professional just as one would expect after having listened to his show, and it was a great honor to take part. Thank you as well to Thomas Rillstone of the History of Aotearoa New Zealand podcast for picking a surprisingly fascinating year to solicit info about, even if your release timing was ultimately made awkward by the death of the Holy Father. Oh, I suppose I can release that for you guys as well, though really, go check out his lovely show. Aotearoa is spelled: A-O-T-E-A-R-O-A Moving on to my guests from the recent sede vacante, the first you all heard was Umberto from the So You Think You Can Rule Persia podcast, who, in addition to offering a fascinating overview of the history of transitions among the Islamic Caliphate also it turns out had the extremely clutch ability to offer live translations of Italian, which put our humble livestream ahead of EWTN, no offense to that major network. The following day this feed was graced by the previously mentioned Aurora, now on as half of Tsar Power, along with Roberto, who is also from The History of Saqartvelo Georgia and Quest For Power. I'll let you sort all that out from the links in the show notes, but it's worth noting that you can expect more collaboration with Roberto on this feed, starting in the not too distant future with a conversation we unwittingly recorded just hours before Pope Francis' passing, talking optimistically about the future prospects of his papacy. Fortunately there's still cause for such optimism: Habemus Papam, after all. Right before the conclave began, I put out a Cardinal Numbers First Judgment segment with John from Prim e Time, though admittedly that episode was originally recorded over a year ago. We did have a fresher appearance from John on the Youtube side of things, as he joined us to meet the new Pope after the white smoke, having cunningly signed up for the correct smokewatch to do so, much like Umberto our live translator. Ethan from Play History on Youtube was also kind enough to join us, helping hold down the fort along with Fry while I juggled toddlers and the white smoke first billowed out. Memorable times, all. A special thank you to all those who shared the episode I had already prepared on Cardinal Prevost with the wider world, leading to thousands of exposures and hundreds of new listeners. Which, welcome if you're one of the new listeners. Thank you for tuning in, and I promise I'll update my Episode 0 soon to help you find your way. Ok, it's time for another bout of new Pope stuff before I fill you all in on what to expect from me moving forward. I think it's appropriate that we take a look at what Pope Leo himself has outlined as important topics and themes here at the start of his papacy. First, peace, which was literally the first word of Leo's papacy. An emphasis on peace is no surprise, for one thing, as the newly-elected Pope Leo himself pointed out, his greeting of peace was in the tradition of the resurrected Christ Himself, and thereby an appropriate greeting for the Easter season, which Pope Francis had opened right before his death and through which Pope Leo will continue to guide the Church until Pentecost on June 8th. The topic of peace is even less surprising in light of the rare public message from the College of Cardinals that was released just before the Conclave, pleading for peace amid escalating war. In light of that, it would have been surprising if he *hadn't* come out advocating for peace. As is, it's definitely a core message, and needless to say a timely one too, with Pope Leo already echoing the late Pope Francis' observation that World War III is already being fought piecemeal. The appeal for peace does seem to be getting a bit of traction, with India and Pakistan agreeing to a ceasefire, and the Trump administration proposing the Vatican as a mediator in the current conflict between Russia and Ukraine. If you don't look in the box marked Gaza or consider the actual likelihood of a breakthrough in Ukraine, you might be tempted to feel hopeful: admittedly as you can probably tell I'm more on the skeptical end myself, though I'd be happy to be wrong. Another topic Pope Leo emphasized in his first speech–and repeatedly since–is togetherness, which could also be filed under dialog or even unity: the interplay between commonality and difference is critical here, and the most consistent analogy is one very suitable to his role as Pope, that of a bridge-builder, a pontifex in Latin, a traditional title of Popes for centuries, though probably not one that really traces back to the ancient Roman priestly title of Pontifex Maximus directly, as it seems to have been primarily added to the Pope's titles during the renaissance, when the classical world was very fashionable. Now, to really tie the old and the new together, I can tell you that a title once held by Julius Caesar is Pope Leo's handle on the social media platform formerly known as Twitter: @Pontifex. When it comes to the Papacy, concepts like building bridges and promoting togetherness play out on multiple levels. First, as pastor of the giant flock known as Catholicism, we can talk about healing divisions within the church. Then, we can talk about healing divisions among all of Christianity, since the Pope is the head of the largest Christian group–and frankly it's always worth noting that most Christians are Catholics. But really, getting arrogant about it isn't the way to bring people on board, and from what I can tell so far Leo seems to have taken that lesson from Francis to heart–not that humility is a novel lesson in the history of the Papacy that Francis just invented, but still, give the guy his due.. Lastly, though certainly not leastly, what about healing divisions all over the world, not just among all Christians or even among all religions, but among all people? We're talking about the Vicar of Christ here, the idea of “not my circus, not my monkies” does not apply, and the more divisions across humanity are healed, the more likely we are to see enduring peace. So, Pope Leo has his work cut out for him, indeed I daresay we all do, as I am going to charitably assume you all want to make the world a better place. Another priority of the new Pontiff is one that came to light even before his first speech: Vatican-watchers know that modern Popes don't just pick names at random, for example Pope Francis was strongly broadcasting that he was going to do something different by being the first in the modern era to choose a truly new Papal name. As for Pope Leo, my first impression was quickly confirmed, as Pope Leo XIII looms large in modern Catholic history and his encyclical Rerum Novarum was a watershed moment in the development of modern Catholic Social Teaching, which is a foundational enough topic that I capitalized all those words and you will absolutely catch folks calling Catholic Social Teaching “CST” for short. Before Pope Francis, when you were talking about social justice in a Catholic context–which, by the way, is the context where the idea first gained traction, being popularized among the Jesuits in the early 19th century–anyways before Pope Francis, when you were talking about social justice in a Catholic context, you were talking about Pope Leo and Rerum Novarum, published in 1891 as a critique of modern economic systems from Capitalism to Communism and all over, emphasizing the fundamental importance of worker's rights given, well, the fundamental importance of workers themselves, as human beings with divine dignity. The Church has been revisiting Rerum Novarum on a regular basis ever since, and Pope Leo has explicitly centered it for those wondering what to expect from his papacy. To borrow the language of a generation slightly ahead of me, it's based, so get hype. Of course lots of people are wondering what Pope Leo will get up to beyond these key starts of peace, unity, and social justice in the mold of so many of his predecessors. We can be here all day and I still won't be able to comment on every individual topic, nor will h e. We'll see more of Pope Leo in the years to come. Of course we can look to his past comments on anything you like, but the basic reality is Robert Francis Prevost is dead, and Pope Leo XIV is a different man. At least, he may be, anyhow. History has shown election to the Papacy can change folks, but it's also shown that that's not always the case. Sorry to disappoint those looking for surefire answers, we'll find out together in the coming years and quite possibly decades, as, at 69, Pope Leo will likely be with us for a generation. BUT, and this is a big but, I do think from what he's indicated so far and from the apparent expectations of the Cardinals who elected him, not to mention historical patterns, I do think it's very likely that Pope Leo will, on the whole, prove to be something of a centrist. That's not to say that he'll be middle-of-the-road on all issues–I really do expect him to lean into the Leonine legacy of Rerum Novarum-style social and economic justice with a major encyclical on the topic within the next few years–but on average I do not expect him to be as progressive as Pope Francis or as conservative as Pope Benedict. Again, how exactly that all will shake out remains to be seen, and I am very bad at making predictions anyways. After all, when I got asked directly about the possibility of an American Pope, I gave a simple “no” and moved on. In my defense, apparently the future Pope Leo did the same, allegedly telling his brother “they're not going to pick an American Pope” on the eve of the conclave that did just that. Now I want to take a moment to thank some non-podcasters who have been very supportive of my work the last few years, specifically the priests at my home parish of Saint Francis de Sales. Shoutout Fr. Mike, Fr. PC, and Fr. Sizemore, who have all supported me in various ways both in relation to the podcast and off-mic. In particular I want to thank Fr. PC for helping review my upcoming worldbuilding episodes on mass and the Eucharist to make sure I didn't go too far off the rails, and Fr. Sizemore for his consistent support and encouragement of my work, as well as his willingness to promote it. Longtime listeners know that I am willing to set aside the Pope-colored glasses to offer necessary critiques of the Church at times–indeed, necessary critiques are actually themselves part of Pope-colored glasses anyways. It's been very cool to have that support even when offering that criticism at times, and I am, of course, grateful. To give a little more personal insight, I think it's worth noting that I'm bringing Fr Sizemore and Fr PC up in part because they're on my mind and in my prayers a little extra these days since they are going to another parish as part of the normal juggling that occurs with basically any diocese. Back in the day such moves were less common, and could indeed be signs of darker things, but more recent practice has keeping priests from staying at a particular parish for too extended a period as a guard against exactly such dark things as may occur when a pastor is seen as the absolute bedrock of a faith community and is effectively given all sorts of extra deference and leeway and such to an inappropriate degree. In the end, Christ is the foundation, it's not about any particular pastor. Nevertheless, I will miss Fr Sizemore deeply, as excited as I am to see what he does at his new parish, and as excited as I am to meet our new pastor, Father Tom Gardner, and the other priest and a half that are coming to Saint Francis as part of the general shuffle. Interestingly, this will have our household lined up with a relatively young priest, a relatively young bishop, and a relatively young Pope, so these positions are likely going to be set in my life for a while yet. And now that we've talked a bit about the future of my home parish, let's talk about the future of Popeular History. First, as you've already seen if you're caught up on the feed, I have some content from Conclave Time still being edited and prepared for release on this feed. In the last week or so you've seen my chat with Benjamin Jacobs of Wittenberg to Westphalia and Why Tho?, who had me on as his guest of his 100th episode for the former. He's more like me than most, so if you enjoy this, go check him out. And if you don't enjoy this, well, I'm confused as to the sequence of events that has you somehow still listening, but even then, you should *also* still go check him out. Just in case. You never know. Also already released is a chat with Meredith of The Alexander Standard, another Rexypod in the mold of Cardinal Numbers and of course Pontifacts, reviewing, rating, and ranking all the successors of Alexander the Great from Perdiccas to Cleopatra VII. Meredith bravely volunteered to take the first spot on what was a near nightly guest list during the recent sede vacante, and we had a great chat that you should go check out if you haven't already. Still to come most likely this month is a very extended conversation I had with Steve Guerra of the History of the Papacy Podcast, a collaboration that was pretty long overdue. I first reached out to Steve over five years ago when Popeular History was just starting out, but I was too timid to propose a collaboration at the time. I was actually still too timid to suggest such a thing when Pope Francis' fading health got us talking again earlier this year, but fortunately for all of us Steve had no such scruples and when he suggested we get together over a couple of mics, well, so far we've got hours of good stuff that will be ready for your ears very shortly, I just wanted to get all this admin stuff and early Leo discussion out first so I did. But you can expect hours of Steve and I on this feed soon, and if you just can't wait–don't! Bec ause it's already out on his feed at the History of the Papacy Podcast. Part III talking Leo specifically is already in the works, with hopefully more to come from Steve and I collaborating in the years to come. After that, you'll hear a chat I had with Quinn from Nobelesse Oblige, one half of another rexypod that ranks all the nobel laureates from 1901 until he and cohost Maggie run out of people. Their show was on hiatus, but is back now, so rejoice! All the best shows go on hiatus, like, a lot, amirite? Look, subscribe and you'll know when any shows with that particular habit get back. Anyways, that's gonna be another conclave second helping episode. The third on the conclave second helping trilogy, likely appearing early next month at this rate with apologies to my patient guest, will be a great chat I had right before the doors were sealed with none other than Garry Stevens of the History in the Bible podcast, in which I fielded his conclave questions and talked about the recent movie as well. Thank you as always, Garry, especially for your patience as I edited my way through our chat! After that puts a cap on my conclave coverage, it'll be high time to release the previously mentioned chat I had with Roberto of Tsar Power and more, right before Pope Francis passed. And there you go, that's the plan for the next month or so. After all that, it'll be 5th anniversary time, and I think it'll be fun to do a bit of Q&A for that. The anniversary will officially on June 29th, so let's go ahead and say send in almost any question you like to popeularhistory@gmail.com by June 20th and I'll answer it for you on the show. The only limit I'm placing is that the question should be relatively family-friendly so I don't get flagged as explicit content by the powers that be. After that, well, we'll see. Popeular History and Cardinal Numbers will be carrying on, I'm looking forward to finishing my longrunning Catholic worldbuilding series, as well as covering all the living Cardinals I haven't gotten to yet. And those items just represent finishing up the current stages. Plus, tere's gonna be more Pontifacts collaboration, including the much hyped Habemus Pointsam project, ranking all the Papal transitions with Bry! But do keep in mind I had *just* put out a note indicating that I was going to stay on hiatus for a while longer right before all this happened, and the factors that lead me to that are still present. I've got a strong head of steam for when I'm officially back up to full production, but until then, you won't hear from me quite as regularly as I'd like. Actually, let's be honest, you're never going to hear from me as regularly as I'd like unless there's a wealthy patron who wants to hand over a living wage for myself and my family as compensation for me doing this full-time. And nah, I'm not counting on that. I do have a patreon though, so if you want to help offset my costs and fuel Taco Bell expeditions or moving to Rome, you know, little things like that, you can. Mary specifically said I can get Taco Bell every time I get a new patron, so thank you very much in advance. Also, a big thank you to Joe, my current patron, who hosts Prime Factors with his son Abram, and yes that's another Rexypod, in fact, yes, that's another Rexypod ranking the British Prime Ministers! Prime Time is the other one in case you've already forgotten, and now you can easily find both of them on one another's feeds as they recently did a collaborative special you should absolutely check out! I especially owe Joe as I forgot to keep mentioning him when speeding through my recent sede vacante coverage, a situation which will be remedied hopefully in small part by this note, and then eventually with judicious editing. Thanks again for your support, Joe! If you'd like to support my work and are financially able to do so, go to Patreon.com/popeular. I'm going to do as much as I can even without many patrons, but more patron support would go a long way to making things easier, I have to admit. So if you want to join Joe on the wall of ongoing thanks, there are still spots left! And if you can't support financially, no sweat, do what you gotta do, but please consider spreading the word about Popeular History and keeping me and my family in prayer while you're at it. Words of encouragement or any other words you'd like to send can be sent to popeularhistory@gmail.com or you can also find me on social media in a few spots, primarily on Bluesky these days at Popeular as I'm focusing more on direct content creation rather than trying to keep up with socials and the website and such. Oh, speaking of the website, Google Domains went caput so the website's kind of frozen, not that I was updating it much anyways apart from the automatic RSS feeds, which for what it's worth are still chugging along. But the rest you can ignore, in particular the big daily show announcement that's still up there, because that was fun while it lasted but that is definitely on the list of things that are not happening unless I get thousands of patreon dollars a month to make this a full-time job, which, again, I am realistic enough to not expect. It just turns out I can't take that notification down without tanking the whole site at the moment, or without, you know, a fair amount of extra work, and since the RSS feeds are still handy and my time is still fairly crunched, I'm reluctant to do that. So, uh, here we are. Awkward. Ignore the big daily show announcement. Thank you. Now, I'm going to make a couple specific predictions about the future of Leo's papacy that I'd be happy to be wrong about. But before I do *that*, I want to note that after today, apart from the contemporary cardinals episodes, I plan to get back to history, leaving current events to other commentators generally, with the exception of a plan to have some commentary on contemporary news, Catholic and otherwise, available as bonus content for my Patreon subscribers. That would allow my regular listeners to have access to all the historical goodies I find without barrier, while still offering something interesting and informative, you know, hopefully, for my backers. If you hate the idea, let me know, and of course if you love the idea, sure, let me know that too. I'm thinking maybe some kind of monthly roundup, something like that. Anyways, on to those predictions. First, while I genuinely believe we would have seen Sister Rafaella Petrini elevated to the College of Cardinals had Pope Francis lived to create another batch of Cardinals, I do not see that happening under Pope Leo, though he did reconfirm her in her role as President of the Governorate of Vatican City State as part of his general “as you were” instructions right after his election, reconfirming all of Pope Francis' appointments in one of the more unambiguous signs of continuity you can have. It's of course likely that there will be shuffling in time, but I think Petrini is safe in her role, I just don't expect her to be the first Cardinelle at the next opportunity, as Leo appears interested in a degree of centrist rapprochement. Similarly, while I had fairly big hopes for the observances of the 1700th anniversary of Nicea that were due this month, namely a reunified dating of Easter, obviously those observances aren't happening right now. And, while it look like there are now plans for later this year, around the Feast of Saint Andrew–November 30th–I think that moment has passed, and I expect it's not something we'll see in year one of a Papacy. Again, I'd be happy to be wrong, but I don't think that's a “coming super soon” type situation at this point. And that's it for today, thanks for sitting through a record-breaking amount of admin. Thanks, Joe!
Philippe est à distance cette semaine pour discuter le temps d'une chronique de la recente tempête, d'une potentielle cryptomonnaie québécoise, de la formation des métier au Québec et bien plus!Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr
Dans cet épisode intégral du 21 février, en entrevue : Sébastien Nadeau, Président du C.A., Zone Agtech, et Maire Félix Morin, Président, Succès Scolaire Une production QUB Février 2025Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr
Cette littérature, crée au siècle dernier par les descendants d'Européens ayant conquis un territoire de façon ultra violente, a façonné l'industrie du spectacle. Matière première par excellence, elle a permis aux studios hollywoodiens de devenir des empires. Mais qui furent les hommes (et la femme) qui prirent tous les risques et osèrent toutes les audaces ? L'invitée de Jean-Marc Panis, Catherine Mory, autrice « Il était une fois en Amérique », volume 2, le vingtième siècle aux éditions « Les Arènes » Sujets traités : Littérature, Européens, siècle, territoire, Hollywood, Merci pour votre écoute Un Jour dans l'Histoire, c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 13h15 à 14h30 sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez tous les épisodes d'Un Jour dans l'Histoire sur notre plateforme Auvio.be :https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/5936 Intéressés par l'histoire ? Vous pourriez également aimer nos autres podcasts : L'Histoire Continue: https://audmns.com/kSbpELwL'heure H : https://audmns.com/YagLLiKEt sa version à écouter en famille : La Mini Heure H https://audmns.com/YagLLiKAinsi que nos séries historiques :Chili, le Pays de mes Histoires : https://audmns.com/XHbnevhD-Day : https://audmns.com/JWRdPYIJoséphine Baker : https://audmns.com/wCfhoEwLa folle histoire de l'aviation : https://audmns.com/xAWjyWCLes Jeux Olympiques, l'étonnant miroir de notre Histoire : https://audmns.com/ZEIihzZMarguerite, la Voix d'une Résistante : https://audmns.com/zFDehnENapoléon, le crépuscule de l'Aigle : https://audmns.com/DcdnIUnUn Jour dans le Sport : https://audmns.com/xXlkHMHSous le sable des Pyramides : https://audmns.com/rXfVppvN'oubliez pas de vous y abonner pour ne rien manquer.Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
Nous sommes en 1960, à Charleroi. Robert Dussart, responsable local du Parti communiste belge, le PCB, est élu au Comité central. Cette année-là, l'ambiance est à l'austérité, avec le programme prévu par la Loi unique décidée par le gouvernement. Les Belges sont en colère. La veille des discussions au Parlement, la direction de la FGTB hésite toujours à déclarer la grève générale. Robert Dussart, contre l'avis de sa hiérarchie, va mobiliser les ACEC de Charleroi et déclencher, in fine, ce qu'on appellera la « grève du siècle ». Moins d'une vingtaine d'années plus tard, en 1979, il revendique la semaine de 36 heures. Les travailleurs se mettent en grève et décrochent la victoire. Dussart déclarera à la presse : « Le travail syndical, ce n'est pas de faire de la propagande abstraite, c'est d'essayer d'entraîner, dans l'adhésion conjuguée travailleurs-délégués, vers des objectifs, même s'ils sont énormes. Mon message, c'est qu'il faut parler aux travailleurs, les convaincre, cibler et clarifier les objectifs, savoir où frapper fort, faire comprendre jusqu'où il faut aller. Quand les gens l'ont compris, ils sont prêts pour faire des grèves, comme celles de 32, 60-61 ou 79. » Robert Dussart est-il représentatif du syndicaliste communiste des Trente Glorieuses ? Peut-on en tirer un portrait type, de l'Allemagne à la France, en passant par l'Italie, le Portugal, l'Espagne ou l'Ecosse : bref en parcourant l'Europe de l'Ouest ? Avec nous : Adrian Thomas, Historien du syndicalisme, associé au CArCoB (centre des archives du communisme en Belgique)". Sujets traités : Robert Dussart, communiste, loi, gouvernement, grève, siècle, travailleurs, syndicat, Trente Glorieuses , Merci pour votre écoute Un Jour dans l'Histoire, c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 13h15 à 14h30 sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez tous les épisodes d'Un Jour dans l'Histoire sur notre plateforme Auvio.be :https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/5936 Intéressés par l'histoire ? Vous pourriez également aimer nos autres podcasts : L'Histoire Continue: https://audmns.com/kSbpELwL'heure H : https://audmns.com/YagLLiKEt sa version à écouter en famille : La Mini Heure H https://audmns.com/YagLLiKAinsi que nos séries historiques :Chili, le Pays de mes Histoires : https://audmns.com/XHbnevhD-Day : https://audmns.com/JWRdPYIJoséphine Baker : https://audmns.com/wCfhoEwLa folle histoire de l'aviation : https://audmns.com/xAWjyWCLes Jeux Olympiques, l'étonnant miroir de notre Histoire : https://audmns.com/ZEIihzZMarguerite, la Voix d'une Résistante : https://audmns.com/zFDehnENapoléon, le crépuscule de l'Aigle : https://audmns.com/DcdnIUnUn Jour dans le Sport : https://audmns.com/xXlkHMHSous le sable des Pyramides : https://audmns.com/rXfVppvN'oubliez pas de vous y abonner pour ne rien manquer.Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
Nous sommes en 1755. Dans son ouvrage intitulé « Lettres Iroquoises, Ou Correspondance Politique, Historique Et Critique Entre Un Iroquois Voyageant En Europe, Et Ses Correspondans Dans L'amérique Septentrionale », Henri Maubert de Gouvest, né à Rouen, aventurier, espion, officier d'artillerie, précepteur, met en scène un chevalier qui, chemin faisant, se moque des noms extravagants que l'on peut donner, au XVIIIe siècle, à la cour ou à la ville, aux couleurs nouvelles. A propos des provinciaux qui s'étonnent autant qu'ils s'extasient, il écrit : « Les femmes s'entretinrent de modes, et demandèrent au Chevalier quelles étaient les couleurs les plus en vogue ; il leur répondit qu'on portait maintenant le « soupir étouffé », la « cuisse de Nymphe émue », « les désirs satisfaits », « la passion dévorante », le « lendemain de noces ». On raisonna beaucoup sur toutes ces couleurs, et l'on ne concevait pas comment il était possible de trouver celle d'un « soupir étouffé » ; d'un « désir satisfait », d'une « passion dévorante », etc. Le Chevalier leur en fit l'explication de la manière la plus plaisante ; mais, leur ajouta-t-il, il en va paraître une nouvelle, qui sera appelée « l'indépendance de l'Amérique ». Elle n'est encore connue qu'à la Cour ; il n'y a que le roi, la famille royale et nos ministres qui la portent ; c'est un habit coupé ; la veste et la culotte sont couleur du Congrès. […] Mademoiselle Alexandre, le nec plus ultra de nos marchandes de modes de Paris, est occupée dans ce moment à imaginer comment nos Dames porteront les rubans de cette couleur. Lorsque je suis parti on tenait chez elle des comités pour décider cette grande affaire ; et l'on m'écrira à Lyon ce qui aura été résolu, afin que j'ordonne les étoffes qui doivent être faites pour l'hiver prochain ». Alors de « Saumon intimidé » à « Tabac d'Espagne », en passant par, Violet d'Evêque, Ventre de Carmélite, Souci de hanneton, Carnation de vieillard, Poil de bœuf ou encore Gueux nouvellement arrivé, le siècle des Lumières est bien celui des couleurs qui éclatent. Parons-nous de nos plus beaux atours et allons y faire un tour … Avec nous : Marcel-Étienne Dupret, conférencier. Sujets traités : Lumière, couleur, siècle, Henri Maubert de Gouvest, epsion, chevalière, passion, saumon,Violet d'Evêque Merci pour votre écoute Un Jour dans l'Histoire, c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 13h15 à 14h30 sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez tous les épisodes d'Un Jour dans l'Histoire sur notre plateforme Auvio.be :https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/5936 Intéressés par l'histoire ? Vous pourriez également aimer nos autres podcasts : L'Histoire Continue: https://audmns.com/kSbpELwL'heure H : https://audmns.com/YagLLiKEt sa version à écouter en famille : La Mini Heure H https://audmns.com/YagLLiKAinsi que nos séries historiques :Chili, le Pays de mes Histoires : https://audmns.com/XHbnevhD-Day : https://audmns.com/JWRdPYIJoséphine Baker : https://audmns.com/wCfhoEwLa folle histoire de l'aviation : https://audmns.com/xAWjyWCLes Jeux Olympiques, l'étonnant miroir de notre Histoire : https://audmns.com/ZEIihzZMarguerite, la Voix d'une Résistante : https://audmns.com/zFDehnENapoléon, le crépuscule de l'Aigle : https://audmns.com/DcdnIUnUn Jour dans le Sport : https://audmns.com/xXlkHMHSous le sable des Pyramides : https://audmns.com/rXfVppvN'oubliez pas de vous y abonner pour ne rien manquer.Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
CHRO24065 - La Comete Du Siecle by
« CAPRICES et FOLIES du GRAND SIECLE par la Compagnie Les Ephémères ! Spectacle baroque En l’Eglise de Saint-Michel, Dimanche 6 octobre à 16 heures Entrée […]
Die Kunst ist zwar weiblich, wenn wir aber von Kunst sprechen, denken wir meist an männliche Künstlern. Frauen sind meist nur die Objekte - sei es die Mona Lisa, oder seien es di Frauen, die Klimt, Schiele und andere auf der Leinwand verewigt haben.Einer Frau, die im Kunstbetrieb des Wiener Fin de Siecle gegen diese männliche Dominanz angekämpft hat, ist unser heutiger Buchtipp gewidmet.Dieser Podcast begleitet die Sendung "Guten Morgen, Steiermark", Radio Steiermark, 11.8.2024.
Nous sommes en octobre 1752, à Versailles. Madame de Pompadour, maîtresse en titre du roi Louis XV, adresse un courrier à son père, François Poisson. Elle lui dit : « Je suis excédée de visites et d'écriture ; j'ai cependant bien encore une soixantaine de lettres à écrire. » Et la marquise n'est pas la seule dans ce cas. L'écriture de lettres occupe une place essentielle dans la vie d'une partie des femmes du XVIIIe siècle : aristocrates, bourgeoises, favorites, chefs d'Etat. Elle rythme, bien souvent, la journée des plus aisées et parfois aussi celle des plus modestes. Les épistolières du XVIIIe ont compris le pouvoir de l'écrit. Mais que font-elles de ce pouvoir ? Revendiquent-elles leur statut de femmes de lettres ? Manifestent-elles l'ambition de créer une œuvre littéraire ? Écrivent-elles pour être lues en dehors de leurs seuls correspondants ? Ecoutons ce qu'elles ont à nous dire… avec Karin Hann. « Reine des Lumières » paru aux éditions du Rocher. Merci pour votre écoute Un Jour dans l'Histoire, c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 13h15 à 14h30 sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez tous les épisodes d'Un Jour dans l'Histoire sur notre plateforme Auvio.be : https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/5936 Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
Au menu cette semaine , aujourd'hui dans l'histoire, un des plus gros «upset» de l'histoire de la lutte , alors que 1-2-3 Kid surprend son futur ami Razor Ramon dans l'édition 17 de Monday night raw en Mai 1993. HBK defend aussi son titre intercontinental contre Marty Janetty et aussi un matchup interessant entre Yokozuna et Kamala. Bon podcast!Pour nous suivre...https://www.facebook.com/Entre2chaisesdemetal?mibextid=LQQJ4dhttps://www.instagram.com/entre2chaisesdemetal?igsh=MTZ1aWM5bWZ2NG51cA==https://youtube.com/@entredeuxchaisesdemetal2377?si=L5iq6WRdfYHQ3mElhttps://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/entre-deux-chaises-de-metal/id1546525482https://baladoquebec.ca/entre-deux-chaises-de-metalhttps://anchor.fm/entre-deux-chaises-de-mtahttps://www.facebook.com/groups/canadianwrestlingcollectors/?ref=sharehttps://www.facebook.com/LWALiveWrestlingAuctions/https://www.facebook.com/wrestlingcollectibleauction?mibextid=LQQJ4dhttps://www.facebook.com/GatineauProWrestling?mibextid=LQQJ4dArriba!
Pintor, L. (1997). Servabo: Memoire de la Fin D'un Siecle. Torino: Bollati Boringhieri. Rossanda, R. (2005). La ragazza del secolo scorso. Torino: Einaudi. Rossanda, R. (1971). Il manifesto: Analyses et thèses de la nouvelle extrême-gauche italienne. Paris: Éditions du seuil. Check out Prof. Marcoli's book Lumen Naturaehere: https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262043908/lumen-naturae/
Pintor, L. (1997). Servabo: Memoire de la Fin D'un Siecle. Torino: Bollati Boringhieri. Rossanda, R. (2005). La ragazza del secolo scorso. Torino: Einaudi. Rossanda, R. (1971). Il manifesto: Analyses et thèses de la nouvelle extrême-gauche italienne. Paris: Éditions du seuil. Check out Prof. Marcoli's book Lumen Naturaehere: https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262043908/lumen-naturae/
Epizod 21 sezon 4 Sak te make'w an 2023 Best 11 Brazil pou 21è siècle Best 11 Argentine pou 21è siècle lan Eske United pa kraze anpil jwè ? Mbappe sonje Messi Download J&M Live onelink.to/3y95ku --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jmsports101/support
Bonjour à tous, Aujourd'hui, nous plongeons dans l'histoire poignante du vol 571. Le 13 Octobre 1972, cet avion a fait face à une épreuve inimaginable en s'écrasant dans les dangereuses montagnes des Andes. Dans cette vidéo, nous explorons l'histoire extraordinaire des passagers et de l'équipage qui se sont retrouvés dans une situation désastreuse, luttant pour leur survie dans l'un des environnements les plus hostiles de la planète.
This episode is a podiversiary one off in which Bry and Fry from Pontifacts, Roberto from Tzar Power, David from The Siecle, and Josh from Grand Dukes of the West all get to explore northern Italy in the year 927. https://pontifacts.podbean.com/https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/tsar-power/id1632832824https://granddukesofthewest.com/http://thesiecle.com/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Retrouvez dans cet épisode des SuperPhysique Podcast de Musculation, Rudy Coia et Fabrice, les fondateurs du site SuperPhysique.org destiné aux pratiquants de musculation sans dopage vous partager leurs actualités. QUI EST RUDY COIA ? Rudy est auteur, coach et formateur. Il intervient aussi bien auprès des particuliers, des athlètes que des futurs coach sportif. Passionné de sport, il partage ses connaissances depuis 2001 notamment via des articles, vidéos et podcasts. QUI EST FABRICE ? Fabrice est l'un des pionniers de la musculation en France sur internet. Il a fondé l'un des premiers sites en 1999 "Smart Weight Training" qui s'est farouchement opposé au dopage dès le début. Auteur de nombreux articles et de livres, il est le co-fondateur du site SuperPhysique.org et partage ses aventures dans les podcasts depuis 2017. ---- FORMATION GRATUITE POUR PRATIQUANTS NATURELS - https://www.rudycoia.com/newsletter/ COACHING A DISTANCE AVEC RUDY - https://www.rudycoia.com/produit/suivi-coaching-a-distance/ MES LIVRES - https://www.rudycoia.com/boutique/ LA FORMATION SUPERPHYSIQUE - https://methodesp.rudycoia.com POUR RESERVER SON COACHING PREMIUM - https://www.rudycoia.com/produit/coaching-premium/ FORUMS SUPERPHYSIQUE - https://www.superphysique.org/forums/index.php MES COMPLEMENTS ALIMENTAIRES - https://www.superphysique.org/nutrition L'APPLICATION SP TRAINING - https://www.sp-training.fr/
Tragédie des siecle #11 les progres de la reforme en allemagne
In 1396 Philip the Bold was the most powerful man in France, but his nephew Louis Duke of Orleans was coming for his position. The turn of the 15th century saw a number of political upheavals in Europe and Louis hoped that the new political landscape would favor him over his uncle. While over the past few years Philip's dominance was unchallenged, the Duke of Orleans was maturing and his ambitions were growing to match. Time Period Covered: 1396 - 1401 Notable People: Philip the Bold, Louis Duke of Orleans, King Charles VI, Queen Isabeau of Bavaria, John Duke of Berry, Joan Duchess of Brabant, William I of Guelders and Julich, John of Bavaria, Waleran of Luxembourg Count of Saint-Pol, King Richard II of England, King Henry IV of England, Wenceslas of Luxembourg, Rupert of the Palatinate Notable Events/Developments: French Expansion into Genoa, Guelders-Brabant War (1397-1399), French Withdrawal from Avignon, Overthrow of Richard II, Deposition of Wenceslas of Luxembourg Check out The Siecle! Cover Art by Brandon Wilburn Music by Zakhar Valaha
Je dois bien vous avouer que je suis un tantinet chafouin, pour ne pas dire carrément en colère. Pourquoi ? Parce que je suis lassé de lire des articles qui analysent le quiet quitting comme la preuve que les gens ne veulent plus travailler ! Vous savez, le quiet quitting, c'est ce qui fait que les salariés ne fournissent « que » le travail pour lequel ils sont payés. Selon une étude IFOP, 43% des salariés des entreprises de plus de 10 salariés admettent s'impliquer juste ce qu'il faut, ce qui est en hausse de 6 % par rapport à une étude de 2003. Et, dans cette même étude, 37% admettent volontiers être des quiet quitters. Ce que je trouve absolument hallucinant, c'est l'analyse qui est faite de ce mouvement. Nous sommes dans une société ou plus de 10% des salariés vont faire un burn-out, ou plus de 44% des salariés se déclarent en détresse psychologique et personne ne dit clairement quelque chose d'évident : nous refusons de nous tuer à la tâche, c'est tout ! Il serait temps que notre société remette le travail à sa juste place. Et je dis bien remettre car cette surenchère de la présence de notre vie professionnelle dans notre vie en général est une chose récente que le numérique a fait accélérer. Pendant des années, le chômage de masse a permis aux entreprises de compter sur une implication hors norme du fait de la peur du chômage. Le prix à payer du plein emploi sur un nombre grandissant de catégories socio-professionnelle, c'est que les salariés pensent avant toute chose à leur confort et à leur santé. En quoi est-ce choquant ? Si un travail me fait souffrir, contrairement à il y a quelques années, j'ai le choix d'en changer. La pression est sur les employeurs. Vous pensez que c'est nouveau ? Eh bien figurez-vous que l'un des tous premiers théoriciens du capitalisme, Adam Smith, expliquait dans son livre fondateur (La richesse des nations) qu'un patron devait payer pour la santé de ses ouvriers et payer l'éducation des enfants de ceux-ci s'il voulait réussir. AU 18ème SIECLE !!! Eh oui, pour avoir des employés motivés, il faut en prendre soin. Et si ce n'est pas l'entreprise qui s'en charge, le salarié s'en occupera lui-même, maintenant, il a le choix. Et pour retrouver tous mes contenus, tests, articles, vidéos : www.gchatelain.com Soutenez ce podcast http://supporter.acast.com/happy-work. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
What if 'fairies' are a memory of a squat race of mysterious pre-humans who lived in Europe before modern humans arrived? Justin Mullis brings a LOT to the cabin in this episode. We cover: the origins of euhemerism and 'explanations' for Norse gods. Bernard Heuvelmans and euhemerism, our first (but not last!) connection to cryptozoology. Early famous supporters of a mystery race include Sir Walter Scott! Euhemerism used to explain troll legends in Sweden. Disenchantment and the changing attitudes towards folklore in the 19th century. David MacRitchie and the idea of the mystery fairy race. Encounters with African pygmies giving confirmation to this idea later in the 19th century. Connections to fantastic Victorian literature. Our boy Sabine Baring-Gould claiming the fairy race still exists. H. G. Wells' use of the trope. Madison Grant and the Passing Of The Great Race. E. F. Benson and (my favourite) The Horror Horn. And finally a deep-dive into the use of this trope by the heavy-hitters Arthur Machen, Lovecraft and Robert E Howard. The Hobbit, Homo floresiensis, and more connections to modern cryptozoology. You won't want to miss this one! LINKS & REFERENCES -Justin Mullis on Academia, including Cryptofiction and other writings -Kaiju Transmissions (Podcast) -Arthur Machen: Critical Essays, Antonio Sanna -Conan And The Little People, On An Underwood No 5, Bobby Derie -Deep Cuts In A Lovecraftian Vein, Bobby Derie -The Paranormal And Popular Culture, edited by Caterine & Morehead -Strange and Secret Peoples, Carole Silver -Goblinlike, Fantastic: Little People and Deep Time at the Fin de Siecle, Emily Fergus -Pallinghurst Barrow, Grant Allen -Fians, Fairies And Picts, David MacRitchie
When reading a crime novel, we usually learn the crime within the first few page turns; the trick is discovering the perpetrator. Perhaps this is what makes Franz Kafka's 1914 book The Trial so haunting—the crime itself is never revealed. Kafka was born in the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1883 and died in 1924, never experiencing the Nazis or Hitler's totalitarian rise to power. Yet his book seems to prophesize the most dangerous aspects of unchecked bureaucracy, legal systems, and arbitrary power. Columbia University Professor Mark Anderson discusses the legacy of Franz Kafka and how his brutal and terrifying novel helped birth the term “Kafkaesque.” Mark Anderson is the Director of Undergraduate Germanic Studies and a Professor of Germanic Languages at Columbia University. He is the author of books such as Kafka's Clothes and Reading Kafka: Prague, Politics and the Fin de Siecle. See more information on our website, WritLarge.fm. 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
When reading a crime novel, we usually learn the crime within the first few page turns; the trick is discovering the perpetrator. Perhaps this is what makes Franz Kafka's 1914 book The Trial so haunting—the crime itself is never revealed. Kafka was born in the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1883 and died in 1924, never experiencing the Nazis or Hitler's totalitarian rise to power. Yet his book seems to prophesize the most dangerous aspects of unchecked bureaucracy, legal systems, and arbitrary power. Columbia University Professor Mark Anderson discusses the legacy of Franz Kafka and how his brutal and terrifying novel helped birth the term “Kafkaesque.” Mark Anderson is the Director of Undergraduate Germanic Studies and a Professor of Germanic Languages at Columbia University. He is the author of books such as Kafka's Clothes and Reading Kafka: Prague, Politics and the Fin de Siecle. See more information on our website, WritLarge.fm. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/literary-studies
When reading a crime novel, we usually learn the crime within the first few page turns; the trick is discovering the perpetrator. Perhaps this is what makes Franz Kafka's 1914 book The Trial so haunting—the crime itself is never revealed. Kafka was born in the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1883 and died in 1924, never experiencing the Nazis or Hitler's totalitarian rise to power. Yet his book seems to prophesize the most dangerous aspects of unchecked bureaucracy, legal systems, and arbitrary power. Columbia University Professor Mark Anderson discusses the legacy of Franz Kafka and how his brutal and terrifying novel helped birth the term “Kafkaesque.” Mark Anderson is the Director of Undergraduate Germanic Studies and a Professor of Germanic Languages at Columbia University. He is the author of books such as Kafka's Clothes and Reading Kafka: Prague, Politics and the Fin de Siecle. See more information on our website, WritLarge.fm. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/german-studies
So there's a lot of Lost World in our Fawcett this episode, but it's not my fault that the two won't stay a Stegosaurus length apart! In this episode, our boy Percy gets down on the British Empire following the First World War, is quite polite about a certain odious British biologist, hints at sightings of living dinosaurs yet again, and lays out his alternative history of South America before going missing for good. It's good for what ails ya. Buy Me A Coffee! https://www.buymeacoffee.com/wideatlantic -The nature references at the beginning will be quite dated by the time you hear this. A lot of this was recorded back in early summer. SOURCES: -Exploration Fawcett, Percy Fawcett, 1953 -Goblinlike, Fantastic: Little People And Deep Time at the Fin de Siecle, Emily Fergus, 2019 https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/40443/1/Emily%20Fergus%20MPhil%202019.pdf -Conan Doyle: The Man Who Created Sherlock Holmes, Andrew Lycett, 2007 -The Lost World by Arthur Conan Doyle, edited with Introduction and Notes by Ian Duncan, 1998 -The Lost White Tribe, Michael Robinson, 2016 -Danny Vendramini's 'Them + Us' Neanderthal page https://themandus.org
This is just a quick announcement about this year's Intelligent Speech Conference. Intelligent Speech brings together your favourite educational podcasters and their fans in a 3 ring circus of edutainment. The conference takes place online from 10 am Eastern and 3pm London time on June 25th. There will 3 keynote speeches, 8 round tables and 24 individual sessions. Each sessions is about 40 minutes each with a lot of time given to Q&A. Early bird tickets are $20 US and you get 10% off when you use the code ”Germans” at checkout. To book your ticket go to intelligentspechconference.com, there is also Facebook page @intelligentspeechconf and you can email the organisers at intelligentspeech@gmail.com. The theme of this year‘s conference is, “Crossing Lines.” Where lines cross are junctures and our era certainly feels like a major juncture in time; at Intelligent Speech 2022, we will be exploring other times when lines have been crossed in one way or another. There will be some amazing speakers. I am particularly excited about Roberto Toro of the History of Saqartvelo Georgia talking about Georgian influence on the Holy Land and Eric Halsey of the History of Bulgaria putting a spotlight on the forgotten story of the Circassians exodus from their homeland in the 19th century. David Montgomery from The Siecle will be there and the Pontifact girls. The list of fabulous podcasters and broad topics goes on. Jennifer Dasal from the Art Curious podcast will do a keynote speech, Alycia from Civics and Coffee and the Ancient History Fangirls will do sessions. The closing keynote will be by none other than Jamie Jeffers from the British History Podcast who needs no introduction. Yours truly will talk about Crossing the Alps, the ambivalent relationship between Germany and Italy. As you guys know too well, German and Italian history has been inextricably linked ever since Otto the Great wooed Adelheid, queen of Italy in 951. We also talked about how historians of the 19th century saw the involvement in the south as a sink of resources that led to the collapse of central authority and the delayed nationhood of Germany. But there is another side as well, that of a deep attachment to Italy and its people. It wasn't just the medieval emperors and Frederick II most prominently who fell for the charms of the south. The beacons of the Enlightenment were seeking the “Land where the Citrons bloom”. Goethe, Winkelmann, Jacob Burckhardt to name a few embedded love and admiration for our neighbour to the south. This ambivalent relationship between fear of wasting resources and emotional attachment may go back a 1000 years but still shines through, most recently in the question whether and how Germany should support Italy during the Sovereign Debt Crisis of 2012. So, it is hopefully worth it. Early bird tickets are $20 US and you get 10% off when you use the code ”Germans” at checkout. To book your ticket go to intelligentspechconference.com, there is also Facebook page @intelligentspeechconf and you can email the organisers at intelligentspeech@gmail.com. I hope you will join us.
In a continued effort to buy time for research, David Montgomery of the Siècle Podcast and myself discussed Scrofula, a fascinating illness with a surprising relevance for our shows. The most important thing to know going in is that you should probably not Google Scrofula before listening to the episode.The Siecle: http://thesiecle.com/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
C'EST LA FIN du Top30 ! Troisième et dernier épisode de cette série où l'équipe a voulu classer les 30 plus grands joueurs de l'OM depuis juillet 2000. Dans cet épisode : Didier Drogba, Fabien Barthez, Samir Nasri, Mamadou Niang, Franck Ribery, Mathieu Valbuena, Benoit Cheyrou, Steve Mandanda, Lucho Gonzalez & Dimitri Payet Bonne écoute. Présenté par Mathieu Lauricella Avec : Idriss Kasmi, Amayes Brahmi & Merwan Achour-Gillot Suivez nous : Twitter : https://twitter.com/PasseTonBallon Apple : https://podcasts.apple.com/fr/podcast/passe-ton-ballon/id1537419817 Spotify : https://open.spotify.com/show/23xunobOH6EjPWsHFxPscU Deezer : https://www.deezer.com/fr/show/2278192 Amazon : https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/51bce4d9-db86-40ea-a737-62ad8ce780ad/passe-ton-ballon Google Podcasts : https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8zZDE0MmE5OC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw==
Le Jt du geek test le Live, ton Zap actu High-Tech by GLG , un petit résumé en Vidéos des dernières news tech et smartphone du Jtgeek @GLGreviews https://www.twitch.tv/byglg Jt du geek sur Twitch : https://www.twitch.tv/videos/1216036120 Mes lunettes: https://s.click.aliexpress.com/e/_ABIEtK Mes montres: https://jtgeek.com/categorie-produit/montrebijoux/ Seiko SRN061P1 Kinetic Blue: https://amzn.to/3kUlDm4 Seiko SRN071P1 Kinetic Sable : https://amzn.to/2Y5md7p #OppoFindN #TheCardCounter #HackIntrnet Merci à nos Tipeurs Les news Tech de la semaine Les reviews a venir Pas de pitié pour les croissants en Asie Les films et series TV #JTduGeek #ByGLG Le Jtgeek c'est 3 Chaines Youtube : -GLG Reviews http://youtube.com/glgreviews -GLG Vidéo http://youtube.com/lesmagouilles -By GLG In English: https://bit.ly/38NY48u -WTS by GLG http://youtube.com/wtsbyglg Soutiens l'aventure sur https://www.utip.io/gregutip Offre moi un café: https://fr.tipeee.com/jt-geek-china ——————- ● Accro En Podcast ● ——————- Retrouvez votre accrotidienne en Podcast sur: RSS: http://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:75856437/sounds.rss Tuto écouter podcast: https://jtgeek.com/?p=57650 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/32qcRl1KNpFgh6jEhi04J3 https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/c1804ff4-137c-46d6-824d-ed530d060c57/accrotidienne-par-glg ——————- ● Suivez Moi Greglegeek / Jtgeek ● ——————- ► Ma Chaine tech | http://youtube.com/glgreviews ► Ma Chaine Touristique et fantastique: http://youtube.com/wtsbyglg ► Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/greglegeek_/ ► Twitter | https://twitter.com/glgreviews ► Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/glgreviews ► Google+ | https://plus.google.com/glgreviews ► GLG Blog | https://jtgeek.com By GLG
L'OM a connu plus d'une centaine de joueurs depuis juillet 2000. En 21 ans, certains ont marqué plus que d'autres l'histoire du club. L'équipe de PasseTonBallon s'est réuni récemment pour en faire un classement de 30 joueurs. Voici, aujourd'hui les places 20 à 11. Dans cet épisode : Djibril Cisse, Gabriel Heinze, André-Pierre Gignac, Florian Thauvin, André Ayew, Taye Taiwo, Luis Gustavo, Loric Cana, Souleymane Diawara & Habib Beye. Bonne écoute. Présenté par Mathieu Lauricella Avec : Idriss Kasmi, Amayes Brahmi & Merwan Achour-Gillot Suivez nous : Twitter : https://twitter.com/PasseTonBallon Apple : https://podcasts.apple.com/fr/podcast/passe-ton-ballon/id1537419817 Spotify : https://open.spotify.com/show/23xunobOH6EjPWsHFxPscU Deezer : https://www.deezer.com/fr/show/2278192 Amazon : https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/51bce4d9-db86-40ea-a737-62ad8ce780ad/passe-ton-ballon Google Podcasts : https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8zZDE0MmE5OC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw==
L'amour est un mystère pour ceux qui le vivent, un mystère pour ceux qui le regardent. Nous constatons, mais nous ne comprenons pas. Pourquoi ? Parce que ce qui nous lie à l'autre est inexplicable. Aimer vraiment, c'est aller vers quelqu'un, non pas seulement pour son image (sa beauté, sa ressemblance avec tel ou tel), ni pour ce qu'il symbolise (un père, une mère, le pouvoir, l'argent), mais pour son secret. Ce secret que nous ne savons pas nommer, et qui va rencontrer le nôtre : un manque ressenti depuis l'enfance, une souffrance singulière, indéfinissable. « L'amour s'adresse à notre part d'inconnu, explique le psychanalyste Patrick Lambouley.----------------------------------------------------------------------------------https://linktr.ee/jacksonlibon---------------------------------------------------------------------------------#facebook #instagram #youtube #twitter #tiktok #love #instagood #follow #like #socialmedia #whatsapp #music #google #photography #memes #marketing #india #followforfollowback #likeforlikes #a #insta #fashion #k #trending #digitalmarketing #covid #o #snapchat #socialmediamarketing #bhfyp
Le 20 novembre 1947 la future reine d'Angleterre Elisabeth épousait à l'abbaye de Westminster le prince Philippe Mountbatten..
L'OM a connu plus d'une centaine de joueurs depuis juillet 2000. En 21 ans, certains ont marqué plus que d'autres l'histoire du club. L'équipe de PasseTonBallon s'est réuni récemment pour en faire un classement de 30 joueurs. Voici, aujourd'hui les places 30 à 21. Dans cet épisode : Lucas Ocampos, Brandao, Daniel VanBuyten, Mickael Pagis, Cédric Carrasso, Franck LeBoeuf, Laurent Bonnart, Boubacar Kamara, Nicolas Nkoulou & Rolando. Bonne écoute. Présenté par Mathieu Lauricella Avec : Idriss Kasmi, Amayes Brahmi & Merwan Achour-Gillot Suivez nous : Twitter : https://twitter.com/PasseTonBallon Apple : https://podcasts.apple.com/fr/podcast/passe-ton-ballon/id1537419817 Spotify : https://open.spotify.com/show/23xunobOH6EjPWsHFxPscU Deezer : https://www.deezer.com/fr/show/2278192 Amazon : https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/51bce4d9-db86-40ea-a737-62ad8ce780ad/passe-ton-ballon Google Podcasts : https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8zZDE0MmE5OC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw==
40 Days and 40 Nights on the Camino de Santiago with Jamie, The Long Distance Coach
In this episode, I start my day waking up in the Basque city of Bayonne where I explore the environs and the cathedral before being transported to St-Jean-Pied-de-Port at the foot of the Pyrenees mountains that divide France and Spain. I talk about getting checked in for my long distance walk and finding my first accommodation on the route. I start to reveal some insight to the daily life of being a pilgrim and I recount a story my past when visiting a Ukranian tall ship at the Armada du Siecle in Rouen in 1999. As ever, I digress at times and sprinkle a few words of wisdom as I tell my story! -- Pre-order a signed copy of my book NOW (includes worldwide shipping) where I go into more depth about this adventure and share my wisdom to help people move forward in life and achieve their dreams and ambitions https://ul2zhpp5wtc.typeform.com/to/waCTXArv
Yaël Nazé, astronome et maître de recherche FNRS, membre de l’Institut d’astrophysique et de géophysique de l’université de Liège.
When reading a crime novel, we usually learn the crime within the first few page turns; the trick is discovering the perpetrator. Perhaps this is what makes Franz Kafka’s 1914 book The Trial so haunting—the crime itself is never revealed. Kafka was born in the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1883 and died in 1924, never experiencing the Nazis or Hitler’s totalitarian rise to power. Yet his book seems to prophesize the most dangerous aspects of unchecked bureaucracy, legal systems, and arbitrary power. Columbia University Professor Mark Anderson discusses the legacy of Franz Kafka and how his brutal and terrifying novel helped birth the term “Kafkaesque.” Mark Anderson is the Director of Undergraduate Germanic Studies and a Professor of Germanic Languages at Columbia University. He is the author of books such as Kafka’s Clothes and Reading Kafka: Prague, Politics and the Fin de Siecle. See more information on our website, WritLarge.fm. Follow us on Twitter @WritLargePod.
Depuis plus de 40 ans que l'ONU en 1977 à officialiser cette journée, mais nous constatons que La postérité de la femme du 21ème S. est caractérisé par la recherche de l'égalité entre homme et la femme, par la recherche de dialogue avec le diable, des matériels et ont pour conséquences : Nous avons créé un monde malade... Decouvrons dans cette lecon quel sera le role originel de la femme chretienne dans cette nouvelle decennie 2021 - 2030. TEXTES BIBLIQUES : GENÈSE 3:14-17, PROVERBES 18:22, MATTHIEU 27:51-53, 2 CORINTHIENS 5:21.
Ancien chercheur en mathématique et expert en énergie, Jean-Pierre Goux engagé dans l’écologie est auteur de la saga -Siècle Bleue-. Amoureux de la Terre il co-fonde -OneHome-. Cette expérience communautaire et artistique qui rassemble autour de l’overview effect (la vue de la Terre tournante). Prendre ce recul d’un millions de kilomètres pour voir notre Grande Maison est le chemin le plus court pour se reconnecter à son chez Soi au Vivant, à le chérir, le respecter et l’aimer...nous compris. Bonne écoute ! Pour poursuivre la rencontre avec Jean-Pierre Goux: Visitez le site OneHome https://fr.onehome.org/ Lisez Siècle Bleu https://www.lamersalee.com/livre/siecle-bleu-tome-1/ Sorti récemment en poche https://livre.fnac.com/a15117016/Siecle-bleu-Le-reve-de-Gaia-Tome-1-Siecle-bleu-Jean-Pierre-Goux?esl-k=sem-google%7cng%7cc498770416797%7cm%7ckpla296351512230%7cp%7ct%7cdm%7ca118234909615%7cg12350685724&gclid=CjwKCAiAm-2BBhANEiwAe7eyFLcS4-KAz39IksRXDNscqgTcJttEm8cnPHAY7pZKcOLVVIs_ThSpORoCYXoQAvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds&oref=00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000&Origin=SEA_GOOGLE_PLA_BOOKS
NOUS CONSTATONS QUE L'ÉGLISE DU 21ème SIECLE EST QUALIFIÉ PAR UNE GRANDE IGNORANCE DE LA PAROLE DE DIEU EN LAISSANT UN GRAND VIDE POUR LES TÉLÉPHONES ET INTERNET. COMME CONSÉQUENCES, NOUS AVONS CRÉÉ BEAUCOUP DE MAUVAIS JOURS CARACTÉRISÉS PAR PLUSIEURS MALÉDICTION. DECOUCRONS LES SECRETS DE LA CREATION DES BONS JOURS DANS CETTE DECENNIE.TEXTES BIBLIQUES : DEUTERONOME 28:1-67, APOCALYPSE 1:3, EPHESIENS 4:29-30.
Retrouvez dans cet épisode de LeaderCast ma sélection de livre en deux parties. D'abord, ceux qui façonnent mon état d'esprit et d'autre part, ceux qui façonnent les limites que j'impose. Ca peut faire des bonnes idées cadeaux :) Les liens du Podcast : - Pour suivre ma FORMATION GRATUITE - https://www.leadercast.fr/formation/ - Pour se procurer mon LIVRE "The Leader Project" - https://www.leadercast.fr/leader-project/ - Pour SOUTENIR Leadercast - https://www.patreon.com/leadercast - Pour réagir - https://www.leadercast.fr/contact/
Why do we value some forms of knowledge over others? Minna Salami discusses her bold new book ‘Sensuous Knowledge: A Black Feminist Approach for Everyone' and its radical call to move beyond the damaging confines of the ‘euro-patriarchal' to embrace a deeper way of knowing. A conversation on decolonisation, iconoclasm, sisterhood, sexism and gender. For readers of Audre Lorde, bell hooks, James Baldwin and W E B Du Bois. Listeners can get a year's subscription to New Humanist magazine for just £13.50. Head to newhumanist.org.uk/subscribe and enter the code WITHREASON.Presenters: Alice Bloch & Samira ShackleProducer: Alice Bloch Music by DanosongsFurther reading:- Minna Salami (2020) ‘Sensuous Knowledge: A Black Feminist Approach for Everyone'- Audre Lorde (1984) ‘The Master's Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master's House' - Audre Lorde (1979) ‘An Open Letter to Mary Daly' - Mary Daly (1978) ‘Gyn/Ecology' - W E B Du Bois (1903) ‘The Souls of Black Folk' - James Baldwin (1956) ‘Giovanni's Room' - Nikesh Shukla (ed) (2016) ‘The Good Immigrant'- New Humanist magazine (2020) - Charting Black Lives in the Fin de Siecle, by Lola Okolosie
durée : 00:05:06 - La Chronique de Christophe Bourseiller - par : Christophe Bourseiller - .
Fin de Siecle, or the phenomenon of unrest at the end of a century, arrived late in the US. In this reading of the essay “Can You Hear the Angels Whisper” meet an all-American family welcoming grace, in spite of adversity. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/sarene/support
Dans cette chronique, Bernard Bessou, militant syndical et politique, ancien directeur de cabinet du maire de Tarbes Raymond Erraçarret, nous brosse un tableau d'un siècle d'économie de la Bigorre.
Rav Eytan Fiszon | Cours, conférences, videos, échanges avec le Rav
Pinhas au 21e siecle
Rav Eytan Fiszon | Cours, conférences, videos, échanges avec le Rav
Pinhas au 21e siecle
More great books at LoyalBooks.com
Retour sur le tie-break du siècle entre Bjorn Borg et John McEnroe lors du 4ème set de la finale de Wimbledon en 1980 ! Un podcast de Thomas Glavieux-Moreau en compagnie d'Arnaud Leroux...
Retour sur le tie-break du siècle entre Bjorn Borg et John McEnroe lors du 4ème set de la finale de Wimbledon en 1980 ! Un podcast de Thomas Glavieux-Moreau en compagnie d'Arnaud Leroux...
Bonus episode of The Age of Victoria & The Siècle! Learn about the differences between how France and Britain experienced the years after Waterloo in a conversation between your host Chris Fernandez-Packham and David Montgomery, host of the Siecle Podcast. We chat about the state of Britain and France after the battle of Waterloo, to […] The post BONUS CHAT WITH THE SIECLE PODCAST – BRITAIN AND FRANCE AFTER WATERLOO appeared first on AGE OF VICTORIA PODCAST.
Bonus episode of The Age of Victoria & The Siècle! Learn about the differences between how France and Britain experienced the years after Waterloo in a conversation between your host Chris Fernandez-Packham and David Montgomery, host of the Siecle Podcast. We chat about the state of Britain and France after […] The post BONUS CHAT WITH THE SIECLE PODCAST – BRITAIN AND FRANCE AFTER WATERLOO appeared first on AGE OF VICTORIA PODCAST.
Born right here in NYC at the very cusp of the Fin de Siecle, Christmas Day 1899, Humphrey DeForest Bogart came from a moneyed family as the scion of an early feminist suffragette. Intended to be brought up in "proper society", he blew his shot at Yale by tossing the headmaster into a local pond - his penchant for two fisted belligerence and a taste for strong, even "difficult" women present from an early age. "I wouldn't give you two cents for a dame without a temper," he once said... Joining the Navy at the height of the Great War, he came back from his experience "a liberal who hated pretensions, phonies, and snobs, defying both conventional behavior and authority"...very much a man after my own heart. Breaking into film in a recurring, even typecast role as a gangster of one sort or another (supposedly due to a resemblance to folk hero gangster John Dillinger, but I'm not seeing it), he worked that niche for 6 years and dozens of films before landing the role that made him a star: Sam Spade in John Huston's The Maltese Falcon. Following up with the much beloved Casablanca, it was his films with a certain someone that really cemented his position as a true Hollywood icon: To Have and Have Not. The Big Sleep. Dark Passage. Key Largo. It took him three bad marriages (the last of whom burned down their house, went after him with a knife and slit her own wrists several times) before he finally met his match in the sultry Lauren Bacall, who was both his longest and final spouse...and less than half his age. They met on the set of To Have and Have Not, and the heat carried offscreen, with the two remaining a couple through his death 12 years on. Always open about his issues with directors, actors and producers so often left on a pedestal, he both stood up rather openly against McCarthy's blacklist that was hitting so many in Hollywood at the time and even started his own production company (Santana productions), the working outside the system nature of which likely occasioned his run of far lesser (if occasionally much feted) final films, of which In A Lonely Place is easily the strongest contender. Further the man who coined the term "the Rat Pack" and dubbed the "PR director" of its earliest iteration (which included Bogie, Bacall, Sinatra and Judy Garland and her husband, among others), join us as we talk one of the true legends of the studio era, the inimitable Humphrey Bogart! Week 74: We’ll Always Have Paris – the films of Humphrey Bogart https://weirdscenes1.wordpress.com/https://www.facebook.com/WeirdScenes1https://twitter.com/WeirdScenes1 (@weirdscenes1)https://thirdeyecinema.podbean.com/ https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/third-eye-cinema-weird-scenes-inside-the-goldmine-podcast/id553402044
Vous aimez vous moquer des grosses ou des gens qui jouent de la country ? Ce podcast est fait pour vous ! Et comme c’est le 30eme épisode de CQLP on a la joie de retrouver nos américaines ! Wiiii ^^ Attention podcast 100% spoil ! Au programme du jour:Le roi lion 4 1:33Le coup du siecle 22:17Wild rose 40:42 Pour nous écrire et nous dire à quel point on est merveilleux :https://www.facebook.com/Cest-quoi-le-pitch--589845671395316/
On this month's Arts in the City: what it took to remount Nam June Paik's complex Fin de Siecle at the Whitney; author Phil Hansen; actors Jamie Foxx, Taron Egerton and Ben Mendelsohn.
L’initiative du siècle: un lobby globaliste canadien pro-immigration massive La semaine de la citoyennetéhttps://twitter.com/HonAhmedHussen/status/1050758383773483008L’initiative du sièclehttps://www.cbc.ca/radio/thesundayedition/the-sunday-edition-october-14-2018-1.4858401/canada-s-population-needs-to-be-100-million-by-2100-1.4860172FB: http://archive.is/JYJ9uhttps://www.lapresse.ca/actualites/politique/politique-canadienne/201610/23/01-5033404-objectif-100-millions-de-canadiens-dici-2100-.phpWISEMANhttp://www.centuryinitiative.ca/equipe/?lang=fr#1475583522392-6c4d3a61-5d1dhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tcsRrk7AyR0https://www.bloomberg.com/research/stocks/private/person.asp?personId=718594
In the fourth podcast of Arguing History, Mark D. Steinberg and Michael David-Fox discuss the factors driving the Russian Revolutions of 1917. They consider how what is often remembered as two distinct events was in fact a multitude of different revolutions, reflecting the various goals of a diverse range of participants. In the process, they debate the underlying factors behind them, the reasons why events took the courses they did, and how it was that such a profusion of revolutions came to be defined in the way that we remember them today. Mark D. Steinberg is Professor of History at the University of Illinois-Urbana-Champlain and the author of several books about Russian history, including The Russian Revolution, 1905-1921, Petersburg Fin de Siecle, and Voices of the Revolution 1917. Michael David-Fox is Professor in the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service and Department of History at Georgetown University and the author of Revolution of the Mind: Higher Learning Among the Bolsheviks, 1918-1929 and Showcasing the Great Experiment: Cultural Diplomacy and Western Visitors to the Soviet Union, 1921-1941. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In the fourth podcast of Arguing History, Mark D. Steinberg and Michael David-Fox discuss the factors driving the Russian Revolutions of 1917. They consider how what is often remembered as two distinct events was in fact a multitude of different revolutions, reflecting the various goals of a diverse range of participants. In the process, they debate the underlying factors behind them, the reasons why events took the courses they did, and how it was that such a profusion of revolutions came to be defined in the way that we remember them today. Mark D. Steinberg is Professor of History at the University of Illinois-Urbana-Champlain and the author of several books about Russian history, including The Russian Revolution, 1905-1921, Petersburg Fin de Siecle, and Voices of the Revolution 1917. Michael David-Fox is Professor in the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service and Department of History at Georgetown University and the author of Revolution of the Mind: Higher Learning Among the Bolsheviks, 1918-1929 and Showcasing the Great Experiment: Cultural Diplomacy and Western Visitors to the Soviet Union, 1921-1941. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Professor Rosina Neginsky discusses her new book “Mental Illness and Symbolism” and “Salome, the Image of a Woman who Never Was,” in the context of the Fin de Siecle.
In dieser Episode der Kulturviertelstunde widmen wir uns einer 160 Werke umfassenden Schau Egon Schieles, die bis zum 18. Juni 2017 in der Wiener Albertina zu sehen ist. Zu Wort kommen Ivana Novoselac-Binder, ihres Zeichens zuständig für die Social Media Agenda der Wiener Albertina, die zur Social Conference einlud und im Zuge dessen über die Welt Egon Schieles und der Wiener Boheme sprach, sowie die Stylistin Olga Schloemer, die im Vorfeld zur Fashion Lounge einen kurzen Einblick über die Mode und deren Veränderung im Fin de Siecle gab. Nachzulesen und nachzusehen ist diese Social Conference z.B. auch auf Twitter unter dem Hashtag SalonAlbertina bzw. unter dem Hashtag AlbertinaSchiele. Neben den zwei Hauptrednern und einer ausführlichen Einleitung von Manfred Horak sind in dieser Episode auch zwei Musikstücke zu hören. Original Schellack-Aufnahmen mit Helen Trix und dem Song "The Bird on Nellies Hat" von 1907, sowie "Tell Me Pretty Maiden" von Florodora von 1908.
H G Wells -- the man, his women and his writing. Matthew Sweet chairs a discussion about the father of science fiction to open the London Liteature Festival at South Bank Centre. Joining him for the event are Louisa Treger, Mark Blacklock, Joanna Kavenna and Christopher Priest.Louisa Treger's novel The Lodger was inspired by Dorothy Richardson, one of the key women in Wells' life. Christopher Priest's books include The Space Machine and his latest, The Gradual which explores ideas about time. He 's Vice-President of the H. G. Wells Society. Joanna Kavenna's latest novel is called A Field Guide to Reality. Mark Blacklock teaches science fiction at Birkbeck College and is the author of The Emergence of the Fourth Dimension: Higher Spatial Thinking in the Fin de Siecle.More information about anniversary events to mark 150 years since the birth of HG Wells are found at http://hgwellssociety.com/ .Sound Frontiers: BBC Radio 3 live at Southbank Centre. Celebrating 7 decades of pioneering music and culture.Producer: Zahid Warley.
Bart Lootsma über Fin de Siecle.
Public discourse in the final decade of Imperial Russia was dominated by images of darkness and dread. Discussions of “these times” and “times of trouble” captured the sense that Russians were living on the “edge of abyss” from which there was “no exit.” It was this sense of imminent doom, or simply the stasis of despair, argues Mark Steinberg in his book St. Petersburg: Fin de Siecle (Yale UP, 2011), that defined the social and cultural experience of the denizens of Russia’s “Window to the West.” And the apocalyptic visions not so much foreshadowed 1917, as they unmasked modernity’s promise of progress as an illusion. Much of St. Petersburg: Fin de Siecle is about experience: the everyday and the emotional; the sensual and the physical. After all, the prosaic experience of modernity was not of a society ruled by the geometry of order, but assaulted by the incongruity of chaos. As Steinberg shows the clanking of street cars, the bustle of the crowd, the shadows of the alley, and the unfamiliarity of the stranger make modernity an experience wrought with anxiety, trepidation, and even trauma. St. Petersburg may be Russia’s city of light with its wide thoroughfares, colorful architecture, and white nights, but these illuminations cast dark shadows. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Public discourse in the final decade of Imperial Russia was dominated by images of darkness and dread. Discussions of “these times” and “times of trouble” captured the sense that Russians were living on the “edge of abyss” from which there was “no exit.” It was this sense of imminent doom, or simply the stasis of despair, argues Mark Steinberg in his book St. Petersburg: Fin de Siecle (Yale UP, 2011), that defined the social and cultural experience of the denizens of Russia’s “Window to the West.” And the apocalyptic visions not so much foreshadowed 1917, as they unmasked modernity’s promise of progress as an illusion. Much of St. Petersburg: Fin de Siecle is about experience: the everyday and the emotional; the sensual and the physical. After all, the prosaic experience of modernity was not of a society ruled by the geometry of order, but assaulted by the incongruity of chaos. As Steinberg shows the clanking of street cars, the bustle of the crowd, the shadows of the alley, and the unfamiliarity of the stranger make modernity an experience wrought with anxiety, trepidation, and even trauma. St. Petersburg may be Russia’s city of light with its wide thoroughfares, colorful architecture, and white nights, but these illuminations cast dark shadows. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Bart Lootsma über das Fin de Siecle.
Bart Lootsma über das Fin de Siecle.
Bart Lootsma über das Fin de Siecle.
Recorded Live On RTUFM.COM
01.Introduction 02.Buc Fifty - Bangin 03.Cormega - Take Mine 04.Dilated Peoples - Ear Drums Pop 05.Planet Asia - Place Of Birth 06.Divine Universal - You Don't Know The 12 Of This 07.Akil - Unibomb feat. Chace Infinite 08.R.A. The Rugged Man - Kill It 09.O.C. - Word Play 10.Large Professor - Stay Chisel feat. Nas 11.Tragedy Khadafi - Stay Free 12.Square One - State Of The Art Part Two 13.Little Vic - The Exorcist 14.The Lady Of Rage - Some Shit 15.The High & Mighty - Mind Soul & Body 16.Baq Poet - We Gonna Ill 17.7L & Esoteric - Rest In Peace 18.Akrobatik - Hypocrite 19.Apani - Spot Me 20.Arcee - Prime Time 21.Beatnuts - U Crazy 22.Big Daddy Kane - Come And Get It feat. Checkmark & DJ Revolution 23.Dilated Peoples - No Retreat
Bart Lootsma über das Fin de Siecle in Amsterdam.
Bart Lootsma über das Fin de Siecle in Amsterdam.
Bart Lootsma über das Fin de Siecle in Wien.
Bart Lootsma über das Fin de Siecle in Wien.
Bart Lootsma über Amsterdam und das "Fin de Siecle"
Bart Lootsma über Wien und das Fin de Siecle
Bart Lootsma über das Fin de Siecle in Wien (Teil 4)
Bart Lootsma über das Fin de Siecle in Wien (Teil 3)
Bart Lootsma über das Fin de Siecle in Wien (Teil 3)
Bart Lootsma über das Fin de Siecle in Wien (Teil 2)
Bart Lootsma über das Fin de Siecle in Wien (Teil 2)
Bart Lootsma über das Fin de Siecle in Wien (Teil 1)
Bart Lootsma über das Fin de Siecle in Wien (Teil 1)