A podcast dedicated to the history of everything (and the great work that scholars are doing at the Metropolitan State University of Denver).

Your podcast producers and history professors:

Matt Maher

Matthew Maher

Matthew Maher is a Senior Lecturer of History. He has been teaching at MSU Denver since 1995 and specializes in World, Social, and Labor History. Among his passions are reading philosophy, drinking coffee, bowling, and loudly performing punk-rock music.

Monica Black

Monica Black

Monica Black is Adjunct Faculty in the History Department and an Academic Advisor. She has been teaching at MSU since 2007 and specializes in the History of Women and Gender, and U.S. history.  Monica spends time working on her farm raising goats, turkeys, chickens, ducks and bees. She is a devotee of loud rock music.

Jennifer Seman

Jennifer Seman

Jennifer Koshatka Seman is a Lecturer of History who has taught at MSU Denver since 2017. She specializes in Latin American, U.S., and Borderlands history and is the author of Borderlands Curanderos. Outside of teaching and research, she performs with the art-rock/noise-rock band: Shiny around the Edges.

Episodes

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Tortilleras Negotiating Intimacy: An interview with Anahi Russo Garrido

Anahi Russo Garrido is the Associate Professor and Chair/Director of Gender, Women and Sexualities Studies/The Gender Institute for Teaching and Advocacy, GITA at MSU-Denver. Anahi's book, Tortilleras Negotiating Intimacy: Love, Friendship, and Sex in Queer Mexico City is the first ethnography in English to focus primarily on women’s sexual and intimate cultures in Mexico.

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Informal Metropolis: An Interview with David Yee

This episode features MSU-Denver history professors David Yee, Monica Black, Matthew Mahr, and Jennifer Koshatka Seman, as well as history student Niko, all in conversation about David's book, Informal Metropolis: Life on the Edge of Mexico City, 1940-1976.

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Witches- Ripped from the Headlines- The Late Lancashire Witches (The Play)

Part 1 of our series on Witches featuring an impromptu performance of The Late Lancashire Witches.

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Witches- Ripped from the Headlines- The Late Lancashire Witches (Analysis)

Brian Weiser has published a book, Charles II and the Politics of Access, and several articles on topics such as representations of and to Charles II, shaming rituals in Shakespeare's Merry Wives of Windsor, and the military revolution’s effects upon honor and absolutism. His current project is: “The Playwright, the Horsegelder and the Vicar’s Wife: Shame and Shaming in Elizabethan England." His interest in Brome and Heywood’s The Late Lancashire Witches derives partly from teaching a course on Magic in early modern Britain, and partly because the play features a skimmington, a shaming ritual designed to humiliate husbands who were beaten by their wives.

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Special Episode on the War in Iran with Alex Boodrookas

As the U.S. assault on Iran rages, we asked our resident Middle East expert Alex Boodrookas to provide some historical perspective. Dr. Boodrookas is an Assistant Professor of History at MSU Denver specializing in the Modern Middle East; Labor History; Immigration; Decolonization. His book is published this April by Stanford University Press and is entitled Comrades Estranged: Labor and Citizenship in the Twentieth-Century Persian Gulf.

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