Isabelle Roughol
Broad History
The history you think you know, with women in it this time
Author
Isabelle Roughol
Category
Podcast website
Latest episode
Jul 11, 2026
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Episodes
Abigail Adams, capitalist (Woody Holton) | Women of the American Revolution Ep 2 11.07.2026 55:15
Vote for Broad History in the British Podcast Awards! Abigail Adams made a killing in war bonds (and possibly a bit of insider trading). She used John Adams' diplomatic posting to import luxury goods from France and resell them at an insane markup. She's the reason her civil servant husband, unlike many of the founding fathers, did not die in massive debt. But as a married woman, she could not own...
The political awakening of American women (Carol Berkin) | Women of the American Revolution Ep 1 04.07.2026 58:18
The most radical thing about the American Revolution? The sudden politicisation of colonial women, argues Dr Carol Berkin, author of "Revolutionary Mothers" and one of the preeminent historians of women in the early United States. Women were the main organisers of the boycotts of British goods, which fanned the flames of revolution. They were involved in every aspect of the war – except in high po...
The homesteaders trad wives would rather forget about (Megan Kate Nelson, part 2) 06.06.2026 36:24
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...
The American Frontier you never hear about (Megan Kate Nelson, part 1) 24.05.2026 40:02
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 Bar...
History's super confused ideas about women's sex lives (Kate Lister) 09.05.2026 50:51
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 infu...
The fire that started a Victorian gender war 02.05.2026 21:25
Paris, 1897. The Bazar de la Charité blaze killed 118 women and girls. Where were the men? ★ Support this podcast ★ On this episode: Isabelle Roughol - Host What do you think? Read & comment at broadhistory.com Email me: isa@broadhistory.com Watch & comment on Youtube Jump to: (00:00) - Intro (00:35) - Member shout-out (01:55) - Upcoming guests (03:04) - This week's story (04:25) - Tuesda...
The gender pension gap of 1539, or how women got screwed by the Dissolution of Monasteries 21.04.2026 19:16
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 . ★ Support this podcast ★ On this episode: Isabelle Roughol - Host What do you think? Read & comment at broadhistory.com Email me: isa@broadhistory.com Jump to: (00:00) - The Gender Pension Gap of 1539 (01:17)...
"I refuse to be a footnote" – the women who invented literary journalism (Julia Cooke) 12.04.2026 44:32
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...
"All work is sh*t" or the anti Girl Boss feminism of the 1970s (Emily Callaci) 24.03.2026 43:33
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? On this episode: Isabelle Roughol - Host Emily Callaci - Guest Listen early and without ads. Become a member at www.broadhistory.com. ★ Support this podcast ★ 🇬🇧 Buy the book in the UK: https://uk.bookshop.org/a/9178/9780241502907...
George Sand outsold Victor Hugo. Then we forgot about her. (Fiona Sampson) 05.03.2026 46:35
"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...
The long history of women in work (Victoria Bateman) 12.02.2026 50:14
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 🇺🇸 Buy the book in the US:...
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