How was it really?

By University of Sydney History Department

Listen to a podcast, please open Podcast Republic app. Available on Google Play Store and Apple App Store.


Category: Education

Open in Apple Podcasts


Open RSS feed


Open Website


Rate for this podcast

Subscribers: 0
Reviews: 0
Episodes: 6

Description

Presented by Nick Eckstein and Sophie Loy-Wilson, both of the History Department at the University of Sydney, HWIR? asks why historians do what they do. What makes someone study modern China, colonial Australia, renaissance Italy, the indigenous peoples of Canada, or freedom fighters in West Papua? Why do historians become obsessed by their subject, and can they ever really find out "how it really was" in the past? HWIR? asks how talking to the past changes the present, and how it transforms the way we think about ourselves today. Nick Eckstein Cassamarca Associate Professor Nick Eckstein is a historian of Renaissance and Early-Modern Italy in the History Department at the University of Sydney. Sophie Loy-Wilson Dr Sophie Loy-Wilson is a Senior Lecturer in the History Department at the University of Sydney, where she specialises in the social and cultural history of Australia’s engagement with China. Series Producer: Peter Adams Theme Music: Performed by Dr Vanessa Witton Written & Produced By Dr Vanessa Witton / Peter Adams Additional spoken introductions: Dr Vanessa Witton

Episode Date
When a pandemic plague hit Florence in 1630, why were city health officers worried about smells?
May 05, 2021
How did West Papuan people become invisible?
May 04, 2021
Why did the duck go to the Canadian supreme court?
Apr 13, 2021
How do you build your own personal archive of China's Cultural Revolution?
Apr 12, 2021
How close could prostitutes get to nuns in Renaissance Florence?
Apr 07, 2021
What is an "archive of grievance"? And did the Chinese miners get to keep their gold?
Apr 06, 2021