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Podcasts about the Ancient and Early Medieval Periods

The History of Rome (2010-2012)   Mike Duncan    UC Classics Ancient World Podcasts (2012-2013) University of Cincinnatti Classics Department   The Fall of Rome Podcast (2016-2017) Patrick Wyman/Wondery    Anglo Saxon England Podcast (2015-2017) David Crowther   The Viking Age Podcast (2016-2019)  Lee Accomando These five podcasts will take you from the founding of Rome to the tail end of the early medieval world when North Eastern Europe started to see the formation of viable Kingdoms. Mike Duncan's History of Rome is as legendary as the subject matter of its first episode, extending over a further 178 episodes of straight narrative to the fall of the Roman Empire in the West. It a no-nonsense old fashioned tale of what happened in the order in which it happened. Enjoyable for those who like a continuous good story with analysis placed second.    University of Cincinnati Classics Department produced a series of seven witty and enjoyabl...

We Need To Talk About Adolf

The Jew of Linz: Wittgenstein, Hitler and Their Secret Battle for the Mind (1998) Kimberley Cornish   What Hitler Knew: The Battle for Information in Nazi Foreign Policy (2002) Zachary Shore  Diana Mosley: Mitford Beauty, British Fascist, Hitler's Angel (2003) Anne De Courcy   Hitler's Spy Chief: The William Canaris Mystery (2004) Richard Bassett   Hitler's Piano Player: The Rise and Fall of Ernst Hanfstaengl, Confidante of Hitler, Ally of FDR (2004)   Peter Conradi How To Read Hitler (2005) Neil Gregor Hitler's Monsters: A Supernatural History of the Third Reich (2017) Eric Kurlander     I am rather amazed that I read the thoroughly weird book The Jew of Linz through to the end, possibly because I was seduced by its first chapters. Essentially it postulates (on slim evidence) that the course of history was changed by boyhood contact in Linz between Ludwig Wittgenstein and Adolf Hitler. The seduction of the first chapters was caused by the fact t...

French Intellectuals and Revolutionary Sentiments - Why Foucault Works

Sartre: A Biography (1986) Ronald Hayman   Barthes for Beginners (1997) Philip Thody and Piero   1968: Marching in the Streets (1998) Tariq Ali and Susan Watkins   How To Read Foucault (2007) Johanna Oksala I will get Hayman's 1986 biography of Sartre out of the way quickly. It has few real insights into the man or his thoughts (except perhaps giving us some indication of his curious turn towards support for Zionism in later life) but it does have the virtue of laying out the basic facts of his life clearly. One for the library as reference text but not otherwise particularly recommended.  We will lay Sartre aside for the moment.   Barthes for Beginners is equally unsatisfactory. It should have got three stars as a bog standard basic introduction to the semiologist, Roland Barthes, but the graphics really do let it down. Clear graphics are an essential element in this series which sells itself on using imagery to help get across complex ideas. The fact t...

Felix Dennis on How To Get Rich

How To Get Rich (2008) Felix Dennis     Over a decade ago, I passed this book straight on to my late teenage son, not because of its insights into business (although it rings true on that account) but because of its insights into human nature and into the world 'out there' that he was going to have to negotiate in the coming years. Like all sons, he might not listen to his Dad (and no real reason why he should) but he might listen to 'uncle' Felix. I have no idea if he actually read it or not but I am rather proud of how he turned out (not much to do with me and a lot to his mother). Why should have read it and why should it be read by all young adults with a mind to dabbling in the world of capitalism? Because Felix Dennis is going to stop him wasting a lot of time believing that some people are nicer and cleverer than they are or that reading those idiotic books about leadership from people who could not navigate their way to an ice cream parlour on a hot day ...