Civil War Talk Radio

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 576:31:16
  • More information

Informações:

Synopsis

Each week since October 2004, host Gerald Prokopowicz and a guest discuss the various aspects of Civil War History. Each show consists of an hour long conversation with guests from the very well known historians James McPherson, Doris Kearns Goodwin and Gary Gallagher to mention a few. Gerald also speaks with artists such as Don Troiani, filmmakers Ken Burns, re-enactors Rob Hodge, novelists Jeff Shaara, curators, game designers, childrens authors, collectors, and others. In addition to well known names like the ones mentioned, the show often features authors of first books who are just starting to make their reputations.

Episodes

  • Bruce Levine: Explaining Confederate Emancipation

    26/01/2007 Duration: 54min

    Dr. Bruce Levine, author of Confederate Emancipation: Southern Plans to Free and Arm Slaves during the Civil War, challenges neo-Confederate mythology.

  • Mark A. Smith and Wade Sokolosky: OCOKA at Averasboro

    19/01/2007 Duration: 56min

    Broadcast Description Unavailable

  • Joseph R. Reinhart: Strangers in a Strange Land

    12/01/2007 Duration: 56min

    Joseph R. Reinhart, editor/translator of August Willich's Gallant Dutchmen, describes the career of the 32nd Indiana infantry regiment.

  • Brian S. Wills: Wrestling with the Devil

    15/12/2006 Duration: 19min

    Cavalry genius? War criminal? Both? The war produced no character more controversial than the man Grant called that devil, Forrest. Dr. Brian Steel Wills, author of The Confederacy's Greatest Cavalryman: Nathan Bedford Forrest offers his views.

  • Douglas L. Wilson: Lincoln's Pen

    08/12/2006 Duration: 22min

    In Lincoln's Sword: The Presidency and the Power of Words, Dr. Douglas Wilson argues that for Abraham Lincoln, the pen really was mightier than the sword.

  • J. David Petruzzi: For Want of a Nail

    01/12/2006 Duration: 21min

    J. David Petruzzi, co-author of Plenty of Blame to Go Around: J.E.B. Stuart's Controversial Ride to Gettysburg, discusses the real reasons why Stuart acted as he did in June 1863.

  • John C. Rumm: More than Old Baldy

    17/11/2006 Duration: 21min

    Dr. John C. Rumm is the Executive Director of the Civil War Museum of Philadelphia, the oldest Civil War museum in the country, and one with a very promising future.

  • Steve Courtney: Letters from a Sky Pilot

    10/11/2006 Duration: 20min

    Steve Courtney, with his co-editor Peter Messent, have produced a fine volume of previously unpublished letters from a Civil War chaplain, The Civil War Letters of Joseph Hopkins Twichell.

  • Michael Burlingame: King of Lincoln Researchers

    03/11/2006 Duration: 21min

    Dr. Michael Burlingame has made a reputation as an indefatigable researcher of previously unmined collections related to Abraham Lincoln. He has edited numerous reprints of 19th century Lincoln sources, written the controversial The Inner World of Abraham Lincoln, and is at work on a monumental four-volume Lincoln biography.

  • Michael W. Schaefer: John W. DeForest and Ambrose Bierce

    27/10/2006 Duration: 18min

    Dr. Michael W. Schaefer, author of Just What War Is: The Civil War Writings of DeForest and Bierce

  • James A. Percoco: On the Lincoln Trail

    20/10/2006 Duration: 18min

    James Percoco, author of Divided We Stand: Teaching About Conflict in U.S. History, has made a career out of bringing the Civil War and other eras to life for his students.

  • Eric T. Dean, Jr: Invisible Casualties

    13/10/2006 Duration: 18min

    Dr. Eric T. Dean, esq., author of Shook Over Hell: Post-Traumatic Stress, Vietnam, and the Civil War, describes the phenomenon of psychiatric casualties in the Civil War.

  • Stephen R. Taaffe: How to Win Battles and Influence People

    06/10/2006 Duration: 16min

    Dr. Stephen R. Taaffe, author of Commanding the Army of the Potomac, argues that leadership issues were endemic in that underachieving organization.

  • Robert Hicks: Imagination and Preservation

    29/09/2006 Duration: 18min

    Robert Hicks, author of The Widow of the South, talks about the remarkable fate of the Confederates killed at the battle of Franklin

  • Phillip Shaw Paludan: Heroes and Victims

    22/09/2006 Duration: 18min

    Dr. Phillip Shaw Paludan, author of 'A People's Contest': The Union and Civil War 1861-1865, discusses his work, covering topics from the Lincoln White House to the Shelton Laurel Massacre.

  • David Lee Poremba: Hearing Voices

    15/09/2006 Duration: 19min

    David Lee Poremba drew on years of experience at the Burton Historical Collection to create If I Am Found Dead: Michigan Voices from the Civil War.

  • Jonathan Sarris: Fire on the Mountain

    01/09/2006 Duration: 08min

    Dr. Jonathan Sarris, author of A Separate Civil War: Communities in Conflict in the Mountain South, discusses the war that Georgians fought among themselves.

  • David W. Blight: Is History Written by the Winners?

    25/08/2006 Duration: 18min

    Dr. David W. Blight, author of Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory presents the 1913 50-year reunion at Gettysburg in a new light.

  • Allen C. Guelzo: The Lincoln Renaissance

    23/06/2006 Duration: 23min

    Dr. Allen C. Guelzo is the first two time winner of the Lincoln Prize, for Abraham Lincoln: Redeemer President and Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation: The End of Slavery in America.

  • Harry S. Stout: Some Inconvenient Truths

    16/06/2006 Duration: 21min

    Dr. Harry S. Stout, author of Upon the Altar of the Nation: A Moral History of the Civil War, defends his controversial work. Two segments are available.

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