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Voodoo altar in the French Quarter of New Orleans
Creepy, Occult & Otherworldly

Marie Laveau: The Voodoo Queen and the Laveau Legend

Since her death in 1881 Marie Laveau has morphed from a respected and charitable neighbor, or a “she-devil” and mysterious Voodoo Queen (depending on whose talking), and into a saint of strong, Black, feminist womanhood. How do we separate popular history from fact? Today we are digging into the real Read more…

By Elizabeth Garner Masarik, 1 year1 year ago
Theatrical release poster for The Birth of a Nation, distributed by Epoch Film Co.
Birth

The Birth of a Nation: Everyday Racism in Early 20th century America

The 1915 silent-film The Birth of a Nation is one of the most popular and controversial films ever made. It’s success catapulted director D.W. Griffith into stardom while cementing the film, a piece of racist propaganda, into the annals of film history. It’s an amazing film with a horrifying message, Read more…

By Elizabeth Garner Masarik, 2 years1 year ago
family portrait
Bodies

A History of Racial Passing in the United States

Late in 2020, a number of white academics were revealed to be passing as people of color, making the concept of racial passing a matter of national conversation. For these white folks, the benefits of being considered a person of color were based on a perception that minorities somehow have Read more…

By Sarah Handley-Cousins, 2 years1 year ago
John Trumbell, The Capture of the Hessians at Trenton, 1776
Special Edition

American Exceptionalism at its Most Disturbing: “The 1776 Report”

Just two days before he left office, Donald Trump released a Report generated from the 1776 Commission, a presidential advisory committee he created in September 2020 to combat, in his words, the “wicked web of lies” in some versions of American history. The commission was sparked by the right-wing outrage Read more…

By Sarah Handley-Cousins, 2 years2 years ago
Large spread of creole cuisine, including crawfish
Food

Slavery & Soul Food: African Crops and Enslaved Cooks in the History of Southern Cuisine

 In June 2020, Quaker Oats announced they were revamping their famous (infamous?) brand of breakfast products, Aunt Jemima. From the late 19th century to the late 1980s, Aunt Jemima products prominently featured the image of the Black mammy trope to sell the idea that all white families could have the Read more…

By Sarah Handley-Cousins, 3 years1 year ago
VD
Sex

Sex & Soldiers: Combating Sexually Transmitted Infection in the US Military

Wherever you have a military, you will have sex. Whether it’s an occupied city, an encampment in a theater of war, or a military base here in the United States, anywhere you have a large population of young men, stationed away from their girlfriends and wives, you will soon have Read more…

By Sarah Handley-Cousins, 3 years1 year ago
An engraving of Fortress Monroe
2020!

Slave, Contraband, Refugee: The Complicated Story of the End of Slavery in the United States

Just over one month after the first shots of the Civil War were fired, three enslaved black men got into a row boat and paddled across the James River from mainland Virginia to the Union-occupied Fortress Monroe. Whether they knew it or not, the three young men – named Frank Read more…

By Sarah Handley-Cousins, 3 years1 year ago
Manhood

Papa Can You Hear Me? Fatherhood in 19th century US and Britain

Like all things, “fatherhood” has a history. From the enslaved men of the Anglo-American Atlantic to the middling sort to working class daddies and “their chairs,” ideas about fatherhood across socio-economic status in the nineteenth century shared one common trope: fathers were supposed to be providers. This wasn’t always the Read more…

By Averill Earls, 4 years1 year ago
A cartoon depicting several men, representing European nations, holding down a woman, representing America
Sex

Rape and Race in Early America

In the age of #MeToo, rape and sexual assault have been consistently in the news. Debates abound about what counts as rape, whose testimony we should believe, and too often, men with power and privilege get away with it. But though it feels pressing right now, none of those debates Read more…

By Sarah Handley-Cousins, 4 years1 year ago
a black and white photograph of black cowboys on horseback
Frontiers

Black Cowboys: People of Color in the American West

Black cowboys made up at least one third of the cowhands that drove cattle along the long trails from Texas to mid-western and northern points in the middle of the 19th century. But you’d never know that from the images of the “cowboy” in popular culture. Contrary to popular media Read more…

By Elizabeth Garner Masarik, 4 years1 year ago

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17th century 18th century 19th century 20th century history 20th century history abortion America American history APUSH birth control black history british empire british history buffalo christianity civil war colonialism death early modern early modern europe eugenics European history gender history of childhood history of medicine histsex imperialism ireland local history medicine military history native american history new york politics race religion Religious history science sex sexuality slavery US history western new york women's history world history
Recent Posts
  • For F*ck’s Sake: A History of English-Language Swearing
  • The Controversial Life and Legacy of Margaret Sanger
  • Anne Moody: Context and Conflict in Coming of Age in Mississippi
  • The Women’s War of 1929: Igbo and Ibibio Resistance to British Colonialism
  • Race and Nation in Latin America: Whitening, Browning, and the Failures of Mestizaje
Top Posts & Pages
  • The Controversial Life and Legacy of Margaret Sanger
    The Controversial Life and Legacy of Margaret Sanger
  • Selling Sex: 19th Century New York City Prostitution and Brothels
    Selling Sex: 19th Century New York City Prostitution and Brothels
  • Photos of the Dead: Victorian Postmortem Photography and the Case of the Standing Corpse
    Photos of the Dead: Victorian Postmortem Photography and the Case of the Standing Corpse
  • Rebel Slaves and Resistance in the Revolutionary Caribbean
    Rebel Slaves and Resistance in the Revolutionary Caribbean
  • For F*ck’s Sake: A History of English-Language Swearing
    For F*ck’s Sake: A History of English-Language Swearing
  • “La lengua”: Malintzin, the Spanish Conquest of Mesoamerica, and the Legacy of the Translator in Mexico
    “La lengua”: Malintzin, the Spanish Conquest of Mesoamerica, and the Legacy of the Translator in Mexico
  • Celia, A Slave: The True Crime Case that Rocked the American Slave Power
    Celia, A Slave: The True Crime Case that Rocked the American Slave Power
  • Amy Robsart, Lady Dudley: The Death that Launched a Thousand Rumors
    Amy Robsart, Lady Dudley: The Death that Launched a Thousand Rumors
  • Underwear: A History of Intimate Apparel
    Underwear: A History of Intimate Apparel
  • The Sacred Bark: A History of Quinine
    The Sacred Bark: A History of Quinine
Copyright

This podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. For permission to publish any Dig: A History Podcast or History Buffs Podcast episodes in whole or in part, contact the Executive Producer at hello@digpodcast.org

© 2015-2035 DIG: A HISTORY PODCAST.

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topics
17th century 18th century 19th century 20th century history 20th century history abortion America American history APUSH birth control black history british empire british history buffalo christianity civil war colonialism death early modern early modern europe eugenics European history gender history of childhood history of medicine histsex imperialism ireland local history medicine military history native american history new york politics race religion Religious history science sex sexuality slavery US history western new york women's history world history
Copyright

This podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. For permission to publish any Dig: A History Podcast or History Buffs Podcast episodes in whole or in part please contact the Executive Producer at hello@digpodcast.org

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