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In part 2 of our exploration of the American frontier, Megan Kate Nelson introduces two women who belie the homesteader image conservative "trad wives" like to harken back to. Polly Bemis was a Chinese immigrant who built a life and a community in Idaho, despite intense prejudice and stringent anti-Chinese immigration policies. Ella Watson was a self-made homesteader and small rancher, a so-called cattle queen who got on the wrong side of cattle barons in Wyoming and paid the price.
Read more: How Chinese women were barred from the American dream
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Isabelle Roughol - Host Megan Kate Nelson - Guest
On this episode:
What do you think?Read & comment at broadhistory.comReply on Bluesky
Email me: [email protected]Jump to:
(00:00) - 08 Megan Kate Nelson part 2(01:18) - Start of interview(01:46) - Introducing Polly Bemis(03:04) - The majority-Chinese American West(06:55) - Polly Bemis traveled without moving(09:12) - Chinese women were the first targets of US anti-immigrant policy (09:50) - The aggressive anti-Chinese immigration policies of the United States(12:13) - How big government made the West for white men(13:43) - Ella Watson's broken American dream(14:25) - The cattle queens(23:03) - A high tolerance for risk(24:30) - Why correcting the Frontier myth matters today (27:06) - How trad wives utilise the American Frontier(30:21) - What moment in history should we revisit from women's perspective? (34:30) - Outro
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The Western frontier is a foundational myth of the United States. Historian Megan Kate Nelson is here to complicate it with the stories of women who do not at all fit the image of the American pioneer you probably imagine. In part 1 of this two-parter conversation, she (re)introduces us to Sacajawea, the Native American woman who led the Lewis and Clark expedition to the Pacific, and Gertrudis Barceló, an infamous gambling entrepreneur who became one of the richest people in the New Mexico territory.
Members can listen to both parts of this conversation right away. Sign up at www.broadhistory.com/membership.
Isabelle Roughol - Host Megan Kate Nelson - Guest
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On this episode:
What do you think?Read & comment at broadhistory.comReply on Bluesky
Email me: [email protected]Jump to:
(00:00) - Part 1(02:33) - Start of interview(03:00) - The imaginary of the American Frontier(06:57) - What is Manifest Destiny?(09:11) - The West before it was the American West(11:55) - Sacajawea's superhero origin story(15:03) - Sacajawea, an explorer in her own right(19:14) - Exploring as a postpartum mother and how Clark ended up raising Sacajawea's children(23:01) - How Sacajawea became a suffrage icon(26:47) - How Gertrudis Barcelo made a fortune at Spanish monte(34:11) - The epitomy of the Western pioneer man -- in a Hispanic woman(38:27) - Part 2 teaser
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🇺🇸 Buy "The Westerners" in the US bookstore
🇬🇧 Shop in the UK bookshop
(Affiliate bookshop.org links support Broad History and indie bookstores. "The Westerners" is not yet available in the UK unless as an import.)Click here to view the episode transcript.
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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The ancient Greeks believed a woman's womb wandered through her body and made her ill. Medieval Europeans believed a woman's orgasm was necessary for conception. And the Victorians believed masturbation would drive you to madness. Sex historian Dr. Kate Lister — host of Betwixt the Sheets and author of Flick: A History of Sexual Pleasure — joins me for a tour through the wildly strange, often infuriating history of women's sexuality. For most of that history, women were believed to be the more sex-crazed gender. What can we say, girls will be girls...
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Isabelle Roughol - Host Kate Lister - Guest
On this episode:
What do you think?Read & comment at broadhistory.comEmail me: [email protected]Jump to:
(00:00) - AUDIO 07 Kate Lister(01:37) - Intro(03:06) - "Girls will be girls": women as the emotionally unstable, hypersexed gender(05:36) - Why is women's sexuality so much more policed th an men's?(07:40) - The medicalisation and pathologizing of sexuality or the Victorian terror of masturbation(11:30) - The wandering womb(13:16) - Women as baby-crazed, emotional beings(15:20) - Are we talking about the menopause too much? (16:31) - The first woman to describe a female orgasm (she was a medieval nun) (21:30) - "Sex means putting a penis into something" (24:08) - Why lesbians have been relatively left alone (27:31) - The invention of privacy (30:02) - Victorian middle-class morality and the angel in the house(33:42) - Empire and the racialisation of female purity(36:34) - "Go and ask your mother"(40:59) - Where does a sex historian find sources?(42:39) - Why researching the history of pleasure matters(46:22) - The final question(49:12) - Conclusion
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(Affiliate bookshop.org links support Broad History and indie bookstores.)Click here to view the episode transcript.
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Paris, 1897. The Bazar de la Charité blaze killed 118 women and girls. Where were the men?
Isabelle Roughol - Host
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What do you think?Read & comment at broadhistory.comEmail me: [email protected] & comment on YoutubeJump to:
(00:00) - Intro(00:35) - Member shout-out(01:55) - Upcoming guests(03:04) - This week's story (04:25) - Tuesday, May 4th, 1897: A fire at a Catholic charity sale. (08:13) - Cowardly Gentlemen and Working Class Heroes(10:43) - The "Knights Jitters"(11:54) - Heroes and martyrs in a political storm(14:32) - And women in all that?(16:41) - Did the behaviour of men cause more women to die? (17:56) - An intimate tragedy(18:46) - Outro
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Don't work but don't get married and don't count on a living pension. This is an audio read of The gender pension gap of 1539, or how women got screwed by the Dissolution of Monasteries.
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Isabelle Roughol - Host
On this episode:
What do you think?Read & comment at broadhistory.comEmail me: [email protected]Jump to:
(00:00) - The Gender Pension Gap of 1539(01:17) - The gender pension gap, or how women got screwed by the dissolution of monasteries. (02:37) - Dissolution 101(04:01) - The (near) impossibility of marriage or work(06:00) - Pay on your way in, get paid on your way out(08:20) - Sidebar: What happened to "Jillian Heron the idiot"? (09:57) - The making of a pension gap(11:25) - Sidebar: How do we know all this? (13:56) - Sidebar: Could you live on £2.67 a year? (15:00) - "Many a young nun proved an old beggar"(18:06) - Outro
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Julia Cooke, author of Starry and Restless, joins me to bring back three women who were household names in their day — Rebecca West, Martha Gellhorn, and Mickey Hahn — pioneering journalists who covered wars, crossed borders, and revolutionised literary nonfiction decades before the men usually credited with inventing it. We talk about why these women's fame didn't survive them, the challenges of resurrecting female legacy, and what it meant — then and now — to want both a roaming career and a life with people you love.
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Isabelle Roughol - Host Julia Cooke - Guest
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On this episode
What do you think?Read & comment at broadhistory.comEmail me: [email protected] & comment on YoutubeJump to:
(00:00) - AUDIO 04 Julia Cooke (corrected)(00:08) - "Women have no history"(03:56) - On the value of understanding the whole arc of a woman's career (07:09) - They were exceptional but not an exception(09:43) - Meet Rebecca West(12:27) - Meet Martha Gellhorn(15:43) - Meet Emily Hahn(18:09) - Writing about war the way no man ever had(20:13) - Superstars in their lifetime, disappeared in journalism history(23:25) - Fame Without Legacy(24:06) - "Women have no history"(24:53) - Motherhood, domesticity and ambition(29:39) - Making a home abroad(31:26) - Virginia Cowles, Julia Morgan and women who leave no archives(39:45) - Why men should read women's historyw(42:36) - Closing Thoughts(43:13) - Outro
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(Affiliate bookshop.org links support Broad History and indie bookstores.)Click here to view the episode transcript.
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In the 1970s, Wages for Housework demanded pay for cooking and cleaning without any illusions about making it in the workplace. What if work was never our liberator?
Isabelle Roughol - Host Emily Callaci - Guest
On this episode:
Listen early and without ads. Become a member at www.broadhistory.com.★ Support this podcast ★
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(Affiliate bookshop.org links support Broad History and indie bookstores.)Click here to watch a video of this episode.
(00:00) - 03 Wages for Housework (Emily Callaci)(01:31) - Addressing housework in the women's right struggle(02:50) - Two workers for the price of one(04:00) - "All work is shit"(07:51) - Not wages for housewives(10:43) - Biographies of 5 campaign leaders(11:20) - Selma James(13:48) - Mariarosa Dalla Costa(15:38) - Silvia Federici(17:49) - Wilmette Brown(19:58) - Margaret Prescott(22:21) - Welfare(26:53) - How far did the movement go?(29:32) - The care work of the climate crisis (32:39) - How housework got remarketed as care work(36:48) - How the campaign ended (38:45) - The long tail legacy of Wages for Housework
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"We raise them like saints, then hand them over like fillies," she said of 19th-century girls. Her best-selling novels were an indictment of arranged marriages and the female condition. At home in France, her contemporaries – Hugo, Flaubert, Balzac – considered her a giant of literature. In England, she outsold Hugo and inspired the Brontë sisters. Today, we don't read her. She's fallen out of the literary canon. If she's known at all, it's for her private life, a scandalous reputation that pop culture has overblown.
A new biography of George Sand by British academic and poet Fiona Sampson reveals a thoroughly modern woman, who was centuries ahead in claiming nothing more and nothing less than the freedom to be a complete person.
Creators & Guests
Isabelle Roughol - Host Fiona Sampson - Guest
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Forget the cliché that women suddenly joined the workforce in the middle of the 20th century. They've been active in the economy as long as there's been an economy and not anecdotally.
Guest: Victoria Bateman, economic historian and author of Economica: A Global History of Women, Wealth and Power.
🇬🇧 Buy the book in the UK: https://uk.bookshop.org/a/9178/9781035415779
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