Making of a Historian show

Making of a Historian

Summary: A podcast exploring one graduate student's quest to study for his comprehensive exams in history.

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Podcasts:

 Anthropocene 108: The Scale of the Modern World | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:34:55

Anthropocene 108: The Scale of the Modern World by Making of a Historian

 Anthropocene 107: Income Inequality and Climate Change | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:32:26

In this episode, we look at how the history of inequality affects the stories we tell about the Anthropocene. Reading list: Trevor Jackson on Inequality (https://jhiblog.org/2018/04/04/review-essay-after-piketty-sutch-scheidel-and-the-new-study-of-inequality/) Lucas Chancel and Thomas Piketty, 2015. “Carbon and Inequality from Kyoto to Paris.” Schiedl, Walter. 2017. The Great Leveler. Princeton University Press. Selections. Duncan, Mike, This is How Republics End McCarty, Poole and Rosenthal, Political Polarization and Income Inequality

 Anthropocene 106: Infrastructure and Empire | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:43:15

In this episode we talk about how coal transformed transportation, shrinking the world and creating new kinds of unequal power relationships between countries. Then how in the 19th century, coal was joined by another new player--oil.

 Anthropocene 105: Consuming Things, Bird Hats, Railroads, Restaurants | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:40:24

Anthropocene 105: Consuming Things, Bird Hats, Railroads, Restaurants by Making of a Historian

 Anthropocene 104: Was It... Good? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:32:57

In this episode, we ask whether the Industrial Revolution was good for workers.

 Anthropocene 103: Industrial Revolution, Brain Vs Coal | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:31:04

In this episode, we look at the history of the Industrial Revolution. What caused it? Why was it important? We boil down the main strands in historical thought right now. One camp says that the Industrial Revolution happened when and where it did because British society was special. The other camp says that the Industrial Revolution happened because British people had easy access to coal.

 Anthropocene 102: Pigs, Potatoes, Starch and Slavery | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:39:00

Anthropocene 102: Pigs, Potatoes, Starch and Slavery by Making of a Historian

 Anthropocene 101: What On Earth Is The Anthropocene? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:37:45

Anthropocene 101: What On Earth Is The Anthropocene? by Making of a Historian

 Episode 111: Amy Froide on the Female Stockbrokers of the Financial Revolution | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:24:10

This episode was recorded at the dinner of the Pacific Coast Branch American Historical Association Conference with Professor Amy Froide of UMBC. We talk about the financial revolution of the early 18th century--and the unexpected role some women played in it. Check out her book on the subject, Silent Partners: Women as Public Investors during Britain’s Financial Revolution, 1690-1750 which is out now.

 110: Ringing The Changes | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:39:01

In this episode, we hear a version of a paper I will be presenting at the PCB-AHA 2018 Conference, on change ringing and masculinity. Over the long 18th century, British men made clubs to practice a weirdly intricate form of bell ringing called change ringing. Why? I argue that it allowed middle classed men a public way to demonstrate their middle classed skills in a way that was distinctively cool. They showed off their conspicuous complexity--not the conspicuous consumption of the wealthy.

 Episode 109: The Guilded Age | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:51:26

I'm back! After a research trip and a car accident, I take on guilds. Check out historian.live for reading lists, images, and other bonus content.

 History of Coal 5: Coal Power | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:48:14

In this podcast we look at the history of the steam engine, from Hero of Alexandria, to Thomas Newcomen, to James Watt. Shownotes available at historian.live/home/coalpower

 History of Coal 4: Coal and Iron BFFs | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:29:27

Show notes at historian.live/home/coal-4 The new economy was built on cheap iron and cheap coal. We talked about cheap coal last episode. Now we're going to talk about cheap iron. Ironmaking is a complicated and multi-stage process but spoiler alert: once people started to figure out how to use cheap coal to make iron, iron got a lot cheaper. The big thing to remember is that making iron takes a lot of energy. You need fire at high heats to melt the iron in order to refine it and forge it. For a long time people got that fire from charcoal, which is heavy, bulky, and expensive. In the 18th century people like Abraham Derby and Henry Cort learned how to make iron with coal, which was much cheaper than wood. This meant iron became less expensive, and could be made anywhere with cheap coal--which in Britain meant a lot of places.

 History of Coal 3: How Coal Stayed Cheap | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:34:40

For show notes and book lists, find the episode here: https://www.historian.live/home/2017/8/11/history-of-coal-3 This episode looks at coal in 18th century Britain. First, I give a rough overview of what 18th century Britain was LIKE, Men wore wigs and sometimes swords. There were queens and three kings, all named George. It was a time of change, and even maybe Enlightenment. Then I look at how coal remained cheap over the century, despite the fact that demand skyrocketed. It's a story of canals, wagonways, pumps, and the backbreaking work of miners.

 History of Coal 2: Before the Revolution | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 00:37:48

Today we talk about coal before the Industrial Revolution. People needed a lot of wood in the past to heat their houses, cook their food, and make stuff like buildings, bridges and navies. When population increased, people shifted from wood to coal. After the Black Death, population in Britain slowly crept up meaning more expensive stuff. But things got really bad in the middle of the 17th century--the Little Ice Age. It was cold. It was crowded. People needed fuel, but the forests were shrinking. Big cities like London shifted to coal. Coal miners had a field day. Coal started to replace wood in a bunch of industrial applications. Boiling stuff was easy: salt, beer, alum. Other things were harder, like glass or baking bread. In the 17th century, Britain became something new: a society that got most of its energy from a rock, rather than from the sun. Music by Jonathan Lear. Image by Duncan Barton. For book lists, images, and graphs check out https://www.historian.live/home/2017/7/28/a2ipq6n6zn0bn91pyye5fo66fr7vfg

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