Episoder
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In which one of confesses to not having read a common, well known work--and gets ridiculed. Plus, John drives Miss Daisy, and none of us praise famous men.
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We're BACK. Vaccinated, Biden-ed, and with a new co-host to inject more humanities antibodies. We discuss where the humanities fits into a post-Trump world, if there's any such thing.
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Mangler du episoder?
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We're joined by Anthony Wilson, expert on all things swamp, to discuss the importance of swamps and wetlands. The Trump administration is rolling back protections of these important spaces, and we sink deep into why these landscapes are so captivating in American culture. Swamp Thing, Swamplandia, Peanut Butter Falcon, Harriet Jacobs, and more!
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We explain why you too should be mad that Green Book won Best Picture. The film carries on a long--and ugly--history of viewing racism through white eyes, asserting that all that's needed to end it is biracial friendship. Actually just one biracial friendship. Plus the movie's not very good.
Elizabeth compares this to the myth of white heroics in the Underground Railroad, while Andy breaks down other films, including 12 Years a Slave, Django Unchained, and Driving Miss Daisy.
Film buffs, listen up!
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We talk to Terressa Benz and Cedric Taylor about the Flint water crisis. Professors Benz and Taylor both draw on their scholarship to inform their social justice work in different ways.
Then, Andy discusses recent hurricanes in the global South and the ways that environmental racism affected Americans' political and cultural responses. Elizabeth talks about environmental injustice in relation to historic African American sites.
And then we talk Weezer and tiki bars.
Please check out Cedric Taylor's film Nor Any Drop to Drink.
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Andy and Elizabeth discuss the news surrounding the complete removal of Silent Sam. Why should anyone outside of UNC care? What does this tell us about monuments to the Confederacy? Who should we thank?
Andy also interviews Hilary Green at the University of Alabama, who has created pop up museums and enhanced walking tours to elucidate the relationship between slavery and America's colleges.
Plus, TV rec's!
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While editing some heavier episodes, we recorded this "hot takes" of our favorite albums of 2018.
We only talk in detail about records we haven't talked about on the podcast before. This includes bonding over Lucy Dacus, making up with Jeff Tweedy (at least for Andy), crushing on Soccer Mommy, breaking down Robyn's "beats," and extolling the many virtues of The Glands.
Listen!!!!
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A mini-ep series on small news stories we have to talk about.
Andy compares the Trump Resistance Hero to our favorite creepy narrator. And Elizabeth breaks down a troubling Gettysburg Address reference.
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To celebrate the Fourth, we talk the Jeremiad. What is it? Why should you care? We promise it won't be boring.
Elizabeth talks Puritans, sinfulness, self-hatred, and the problems with American exceptionalism. Andy talks nostalgia and author anxiety.
Also appearing: Frederick Douglass, Uncle Tom's Cabin, Alan Ginsberg, and WEB Dubois.
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We break down the history of Juneteenth--where it happened, what it meant, and who was there.
We explore how it's celebrated today and examine why it's so hard for white Americans not to co-opt stories of liberation. We also explore how it's been represented in literature and TV, including Black-ish and Atlanta.
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We talk about the travesty of ICE detention centers.
Elizabeth connects the sanctuary city issue with the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, digging in deep on the Anthony Burns incident--a flashpoint in the abolitionist struggle.
Andy talks immigrant narratives, Zeitoun, and the demand for "literary" stories of assimilation.
Special thanks to listeners Lisa Hinrichsen and Rachael Price for recommending this topic.
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A big episode in which we talk to Erik Loomis, labor historian and film buff, thinking about how photos and films affect our understanding of class, from early photography to Roseanne. We also dismantle capitalism!
Andy talks WPA photos, Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, Paula Deen, and Talladega Nights.
Elizabeth talks Jacob Riis, panic fiction, the rise of the novel, Charles Chesnutt, and even Office Space!
And we all talk garbage on JD Vance!
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Jumping off from the news of Bill Cosby's conviction, Andy and Elizabeth talk about if we can still appreciate the art of scumbags, jerks, and criminals.
Elizabeth brings up Melville's wife beating, and Andy rails against the failure of the humanities and also works through some of his relationship issues with Woody Allen.
We also learn about Margaret Mitchell's erotica. Who knew? (FYI: this does NOT make her a scumbag.)
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John McGowan, Professor of English and Comparative Literature from the University of North Carolina, joins Andy and Elizabeth to discuss the issue of free speech on campus.
This ep was prompted by an upcoming visit on the University of Alabama's campus where Andy teaches. We think through what can be done when hostile speakers come to a campus community.
Elizabeth talks a bit of antebellum and 20c history in terms of free speech, yelling fire, and clear and present dangers.
And then we talk comics and Garry Shandling, of course.
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In this episode we focus on Confederate memorials.
Elizabeth talks southern white women and the beginnings of the Lost Cause myth, and Andy tackles the exclusionary rhetoric of Confederate memorials. We end by discussing Silent Sam, the controversial Confederate memorial that remains on the UNC Chapel Hill campus, still facing north.
Zombie Roy Moore shows up, Elizabeth talks about her March sadness, and Andy gives you some Netflix rec's.
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In the wake of Parkland, we talk guns and the Constitution. Elizabeth talks Garrison burning the Constitution and Frederick Douglass changing his views. Andy delves into policing, Stand Your Ground, and racialized gun laws.
And we finally get to talk about Superchunk and Chapel Hill.
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Elizabeth discusses the complicated history of Haiti, and Andy insists that the "plantation imaginary" is still at work (hello, Django Unchained!).
We veer into the supernatural, Chesnutt's Conjure Tales, and the missionary impulse toward Haiti.
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Unbelievably, Doug Jones won! But how did we get Roy Moore??? Elizabeth talks the history of sexual consent, bringing in Harriet Jacobs and how "consent" is racialized. Andy reminds us of marital rape in Gone with the Wind and "white southern exceptionalism" in To Kill a Mockingbird. And, of course, the crisis of the humanities.
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Two professors use humor, curse words, and hopefully some insight to connect current events with American literature and history.
In this ep, we look back one year into Trump's presidency. Andy sees Agrarians Everywhere! Elizabeth admits that her antebellum knowledge finally feels relevant. We also talk Confederate memorials, dying authors, and, of course, the crisis in the humanities.