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Episode 31 - Haunted by Hitler

On War & Society

Release Date: 01/17/2020

Oh! What a Visual War with Beatriz Pichel show art Oh! What a Visual War with Beatriz Pichel

On War & Society

In this episode of On War & Society, Dr. Beatriz Pichel, author of the new book Picturing the Western Front: Photography, Practices and Experiences in First World War France discusses the visual legacy of the First World War, the importance of treating photographs as primary sources, the controversies over colourisation and the future of photographic history in an age of visual abundance.

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The American War in Vietnam with Rob Thompson show art The American War in Vietnam with Rob Thompson

On War & Society

In this episode, Dr. Robert Thompson explains the significance of pacification to America’s defeat, his thoughts on Ken Burn’s popular documentary, and some of the myths that have shaped our understandings of America’s War in Vietnam.

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In the Path of War with David Borys show art In the Path of War with David Borys

On War & Society

In this episode, David Borys, producer of the Cool Canadian History podcast and author of the new book, Civilians at the Sharp End: First Canadian Army Civil Affairs in Northwest Europe, discusses the monumental task facing Canadian Civilian Affairs in the Second World War, their crucial role in military operations and humanitarian aid, and the myths and realities behind the liberation of Northwest Europe.

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Broken Promises with Christopher Capozzola show art Broken Promises with Christopher Capozzola

On War & Society

Christopher Cappozzola, Professor of History at MIT and author of Bound by War: How the United States and the Philippines Built America’ First Pacific Century, recently joined our program to discuss his new book, the colonization of archives, memory and forgetting, and the efforts of Filipino-American veterans to undo the broken promises of the past.

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A Curious Case of Shell Shock with Joy Porter show art A Curious Case of Shell Shock with Joy Porter

On War & Society

In this episode of On War & Society, Professor Joy Porter author of the new book Trauma, Primitivism and the First World War: The Making of Frank Prewett, discusses Pretwett's life and legacy, cultural appropriation, and the challenges of writing difficult histories.

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A War of Emotions with Lucy Noakes show art A War of Emotions with Lucy Noakes

On War & Society

In this episode, Lucy Noakes, Professor of History at the University of Essex discusses the truths and falsities behind the Blitz spirit and the process of writing an emotional study of the Second World War. Whether Britons confronted loss with a quiet stoicism, utilitarian memorials or personalised inscriptions on headstones, the Second World War was a war of emotions.

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The Great War at Home with Martha Hanna show art The Great War at Home with Martha Hanna

On War & Society

In this episode of On War & Society,  Martha Hanna author of Anxious Days and Tearful Nights: Canadian War Wives during the Great War, discusses the challenges and ethics of working with private correspondence as well as the differences between how Canadian and European wives experienced the Great War at home.

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Biodefense and the War on Terror with Gwen D'Arcangelis show art Biodefense and the War on Terror with Gwen D'Arcangelis

On War & Society

In this episode, Professor Gwen D'Arcangelis observes how the anthrax scare, the war on terror, and the current COVID-19 pandemic are part of a broader and ongoing history of American bio-imperialism. 

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Disaster in Halifax, 1917 with Roger Sarty show art Disaster in Halifax, 1917 with Roger Sarty

On War & Society

In this episode, Professor Roger Sarty, a leading Canadian Naval and military historian discusses the late T. Joseph Scanlon's book Catastrophe: Stories and Lessons from the Halifax Explosion and the military history of the disaster in Halifax.

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Reclaiming Canada's Second World War with Tim Cook show art Reclaiming Canada's Second World War with Tim Cook

On War & Society

In his new book Tim Cook reminds us that "if we do not tell our own stories, no one else will." But the ways in which Canadians have chosen to remember the Second World War has been far from consistent. As veterans dwindle and historians open up new avenues for understanding this contentious past, Tim Cook joins us once again to make a plea to fellow Canadians to continue the fight for their history.

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In the summer of 1937, Canadian Prime Minister William Lyon MacKenzie King spent four days in Berlin. He arrived at Friedrichstrasse Station, home of the impressive U-bahn subway which was built in preparation for the 1936 Berlin Olympics; a year later this same station would transport Jewish children to Britain. During his time in Berlin, King visited a Hitler Youth Camp, which was later absorbed into the Sachsenhausen concentration camp. Before he returned to Canada, King sat face to face with Adolf Hitler at the Reich Presidential Palace. “My sizing up of the man as I sat and talked with him,” King later reflected, “was that he is one who truly loves his fellow-men, and his country, and would make any sacrifices for their good.” When King returned to Berlin in 1946, those sites that so impressed him nine years earlier were now in ruins. Today they are marked with memorials to the victims of Nazism. In his new book, Four Days in Hitler’s Germany: MacKenzie King’s Mission to Avert a Second World War, Robert Teigrob of Ryerson University, shares King’s travels through a history of Berlin before, during and after Nazi rule. In this episode of On War and Society, Teigrob sits down with Kyle Falcon to discuss McKenzie King’s four days in Berlin and the complicated moral questions that it raises about present-day diplomacy and historical commemoration.