Richard Aldous
Bookstack
Biweekly conversations between Richard Aldous, Bard College professor and distinguished historian, and authors on their newest books. www.persuasion.community
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Richard Aldous
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Podcast-Website
Neueste Folge
28. Jun 2026
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Episode 140: David L. Roll on President Harry Truman 03.05.2024 25:06
Harry Truman was educated in Missouri public schools, never went to college, and spent a number of his adult years as a dirt farmer. Yet eleven years after first being elected to the Senate he became President of the most powerful nation on earth in the midst of momentous world events. In his new book Ascent to Power: How Truman Emerged from Roosevelt's Shadow and Remade the World ( https://www.pe...
Episode 139: Nicholas Shakespeare on Ian Fleming 26.04.2024 27:41
Ian Fleming heroicized for all the world the British intelligence agent in James Bond. In his new book Ian Fleming: The Complete Man ( https://www.harpercollins.com/products/ian-fleming-nicholas-shakespeare?variant=41070483832866 ), renowned biographer Nicholas Shakespeare digs into the legend of Fleming himself. Like his most famous character, Fleming’s life was colorfully marked by high-stakes i...
Episode 138: Seth D. Kaplan on America’s Fragile Neighborhoods 19.04.2024 31:35
In surveying dysfunction across America, the question arises: Is the source of the trouble at the local or the national level? Seth D. Kaplan has shifted his analytical gaze from fragile nations abroad to examine the fragility of his home country. He believes America’s problems from health to politics are downstream of individuals becoming increasingly disconnected, neighborhood by neighborhood. H...
Episode 137: Leah Hunt-Hendrix on the Power of Solidarity 17.04.2024 27:03
Solidarity has been at the root of social change throughout history, bringing people together across their differences to challenge injustice within societies. In their new book, Solidarity: The Past, Present, and Future of a World-Changing Idea ( https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/740355/solidarity-by-leah-hunt-hendrix-and-astra-taylor/ ), Leah Hunt-Hendrix and Astra Taylor examine the soci...
Episode 136: Paul Starobin on the Russian Exiles 22.03.2024 29:13
There are now over a million Russians living in exile, spurred on by the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Unable to safely oppose their own government at home, they often find themselves subject to harassment and disdain as immigrants. In his new book, Putin’s Exiles: Their Fight for a Better Russia ( https://globalreports.columbia.edu/books/putins-exiles/ ), Paul Starobin joins ho...
Episode 135: Ian Buruma on the Relevance of Spinoza 14.03.2024 26:34
Rejected in official circles in his day and embraced in modern times by a motley array of admirers, Spinoza was in many ways ahead of his time. His commitment to truth, universal principles, and freedom lie at the heart of Western liberal thinking. As those ideas come under attack on both the left and the right, Spinoza’s philosophical thinking is as relevant as ever. Ian Buruma joins Richard Aldo...
Episode 134: Maria Popova on Ukraine and Russia’s Diverging Paths 01.03.2024 27:49
Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Ukraine and Russia not only embarked on very different political paths at home, but they viewed the future of their relationship in starkly divergent terms. In [Russia and Ukraine: Entangled Histories, Diverging States]( https://www.politybooks.com/bookdetail?bookslug=russia-and-ukraine-entangled-histories-diverging-states--9781509557363)_ , authors Mari...
Episode 133: Lorraine Daston on the History of Scientific Collaboration 23.02.2024 28:41
Large threats to the well-being of humankind such as the pandemic and climate change have cemented the notion that scientists across the globe naturally work together to solve the world’s most pressing problems. In Rivals: How Scientists Learned to Cooperate ( https://globalreports.columbia.edu/books/rivals/ ), historian of science Lorraine Daston traces the trajectory of such cooperation, noting...
Episode 132: David Reynolds on Winston Churchill 16.02.2024 34:56
Amidst all the positive and negative ink dedicated to Winston Churchill, Cambridge emeritus professor of international history David Reynolds offers a new dimension. He places the leader for whom history was determined by “great men” among the other greats who both inspired and enervated him. Reynolds joins host Richard Aldous to discuss his latest book, Mirrors of Greatness: Churchill and the Lea...
Episode 131: Joshua Green on the Populism of the Democratic Party 08.02.2024 34:05
The remarkable shift in the economic ideas at the heart of the Democratic Party—from the embrace of neoliberalism in the ’90s to the left-wing populism that Joe Biden accommodates today—traces its origins to the 2008 financial crisis. Elizabeth Warren, and Bernie Sanders and AOC after her, put the economic frustrations of ordinary Americans at the heart of her policies, making fashionable a populi...
Episode 130: Azam Ahmed on Mexico’s Violent Cartels 02.02.2024 28:53
For tens of thousands of people, living in Mexico today means living in a country where criminal violence begets state-sponsored violence, and where law and justice have so failed ordinary citizens that they often take matters into their own hands. In his new book Fear Is Just a Word: A Missing Daughter, a Violent Cartel, and a Mother's Quest for Vengeance ( https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/book...
Episode 129: Raymond Arsenault on John Lewis 24.01.2024 28:33
Freedom Rider and Congressman John Lewis was widely viewed as a saint no less than a civil rights icon. How to capture the full humanity of such a legendary figure, whose life was intertwined with some of America’s lowest lows and highest highs? Civil rights historian Raymond Arsenault does just that in his new biography, John Lewis: In Search of the Beloved Community ( https://yalebooks.yale.edu/...
Episode 128: Joseph S. Nye Jr. on Postwar America 17.01.2024 27:13
Joseph Nye’s prominent dual roles as policymaker and foreign affairs academic have rendered him one of the most important observers of U.S. foreign policy since World War II. In his new book, A Life in the American Century ( https://www.politybooks.com/bookdetail?book_slug=a-life-in-the-american-century--9781509560684 ), the statesman-scholar looks back on the last century’s events from a personal...
Episode 127: Ganesh Sitaraman on Helping Flying Soar 03.01.2024 28:00
Long gone are the days of steak dinners, piano bars, and free alcohol on flights—not to mention widely expanding markets and strong competition. Vanderbilt Law professor Ganesh Sitaraman looks to the deregulation of the airline industry in the 1970s to explain the relatively dismal state of flying today. In his new book, Why Flying Is Miserable: And How to Fix It ( https://globalreports.columbia.e...
Episode 126: Nikki Vargas on the Roads Taken 18.12.2023 28:50
Travel is exhilarating and enlightening, but what happens when it becomes an escape from things that really matter? For acclaimed travel writer Nikki Vargas, travel has been her work, her dreams—and also her crutch. She joins host Richard Aldous to discuss her new book Call You When I Land ( https://www.harpercollins.com/products/call-you-when-i-land-nikki-vargas?variant=41011396214818 ), a memoir...
Episode 125: Daniel Schulman on the Jewish Titans 05.12.2023 29:00
Rockefeller, Morgan, and Carnegie are household names, yet much less known are the Jewish “money kings” who came to America in the 19th century. In his new book The Money Kings: The Epic Story of the Jewish Immigrants Who Transformed Wall Street and Shaped Modern America ( https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/541779/the-money-kings-by-daniel-schulman/ ), Daniel Shulman tells the story of the p...
Episode 124: John Coates on the New Concentration of Financial Power 29.11.2023 28:08
The American economy is once again experiencing a concentration of financial power in a few hands, but this time around the actors are much less familiar. As John Coates shows in his new book, The Problem of 12: When a Few Financial Institutions Control Everything ( https://globalreports.columbia.edu/books/the-problem-of-twelve/#:~:text=When%20a%20Few%20Financial%20Institutions%20Control%20Everyth...
Episode 123: Laurence Jurdem on TR and Henry Cabot Lodge 15.11.2023 28:37
The ambitious, larger-than-life character of Theodore Roosevelt is the stuff of legend. Outside of his connection with the League of Nations, much less is known about Roosevelt’s closest friend, Henry Cabot Lodge. Equally abundant in intellectual gifts, Lodge helped launch to the presidency the man whose vision he shared of a United States divinely ordained to spread prosperity and peace throughou...
Episode 122: Thomas Graham on Seeing Russia Clearly 08.11.2023 28:09
Was there a moment after the Cold War when the United States “lost” Russia? Thomas Graham, senior director for Russia on the National Security Council under President George W. Bush, looks back to the period between 1991 and 2022 to grapple with what might have been—or, better, what was never meant to be. He joins host Richard Aldous to assess what the United States got wrong about Russia and to d...
Episode 121: Uri Kaufman on the Yom Kippur War 01.11.2023 32:03
The October 7 terrorist attacks by Hamas on Israel were launched fifty years and a day after the last great surprise assault on the country by its Arab neighbors. At the time of the Yom Kippur War, Israel was not only much poorer and weaker than it is today, but it was completely dependent for military aid on a United States preoccupied with oil and the Soviet threat. Uri Kaufman chronicles the ri...
Episode 120: Katherine Turk on NOW’s Lesser-Known Feminists 25.10.2023 27:11
Betty Friedan and many of her NOW co-founders have become household names, but what of the women who built on their pioneering work? In her new book, The Women of NOW: How Feminists Built an Organization That Transformed America ( https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374601539/thewomenofnow ), Katherine Turk looks at the second-wave feminists who broadened the movement to include all women. She join...
Episode 119: Alexandra Hudson on Civility 18.10.2023 26:30
Engaging with those who are different from us is essential to democratic life and politics. Alexandra Hudson argues that in order to improve the tenor of our interactions we must cultivate civility, which unlike mere politeness entails a respect for others as our moral equals. She joins host Richard Aldous to discuss her new book, The Soul of Civility: Timeless Principles to Heal Society and Ourse...
Episode 118: Joseph Horowitz on the Art-Freedom Nexus 11.10.2023 30:31
Does the ability to produce great art depend upon living in a free country? For a time the rhetoric emanating from the United States—including from President John F. Kennedy himself—suggested it did. Classical music expert Joseph Horowitz delves into the sources of this Cold War-era hyperbole in his new book, The Propaganda of Freedom: JFK, Shostakovich, Stravinsky, and the Cultural Cold War ( htt...
Episode 117: Yascha Mounk on the False Promise of Identity Ideology 04.10.2023 31:14
Across America, from college campuses to corporate boardrooms, a set of ideas has taken hold affirming race, gender, and sexual orientation as the essential prisms through which we experience life. In his new book, The Identity Trap: A Story of Ideas and Power in Our Time ( https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/712961/the-identity-trap-by-yascha-mounk/ ), academic and writer Yascha Mounk explor...
Episode 116: Michael S. Roth on Loving Learning 27.09.2023 28:58
In an era when machines are progressing from thinking for us to learning for us, it’s worth asking what exactly the purpose of learning is. Michael Roth, president of Wesleyan University, looks back to students of some of history’s great inculcators to find a more foundational understanding beyond simply the accumulation of knowledge. He sits down with host Richard Aldous to discuss his new book,...
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