Dig: A History Podcast
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Dig: A History Podcast
@dig-history.bsky.social
Four feminist historians. 200+ episodes, and a world of history to unearth. Can you dig it? digpodcast.org

SPIRITUALISM’S PLACE: REFORMERS, SEEKERS AND SEANCES IN LILY DALE now available from Cornell University Press
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Martian Visitors in the Gilded Age

Over an eight-month period in 1896-1897, thousands of people across North America reported seeing mysterious ships in the air or lights in the sky. There were over 12,000 newspaper accounts published about the phenomenon in 408 different newspapers in 41 American…
Martian Visitors in the Gilded Age
Over an eight-month period in 1896-1897, thousands of people across North America reported seeing mysterious ships in the air or lights in the sky. There were over 12,000 newspaper accounts published about the phenomenon in 408 different newspapers in 41 American states and six Canadian provinces. The airships were usually described as oblong, cigar-shaped objects, sometimes with wings that would flap up and down.
digpodcast.org
November 10, 2025 at 1:01 AM
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Beasts and Believers: A History of Werewolf Trials in Early Modern Europe

In 1220 CE, St. Francis of Assisi tamed a ferocious werewolf terrorizing Gubbio, Italy—transforming "Brother Wolf" from savage beast to peaceful townsperson. But why did Christianity need to conquer the wolf? For millennia,…
Beasts and Believers: A History of Werewolf Trials in Early Modern Europe
In 1220 CE, St. Francis of Assisi tamed a ferocious werewolf terrorizing Gubbio, Italy—transforming "Brother Wolf" from savage beast to peaceful townsperson. But why did Christianity need to conquer the wolf? For millennia, werewolves have stalked the boundaries between civilization and savagery, humanity and monstrosity. From ancient Mesopotamian curses to Greek myths of divine punishment, from medieval theology to early modern courtrooms where hundreds died in werewolf trials, the shape-shifter has embodied our deepest anxieties about human nature itself.
digpodcast.org
October 27, 2025 at 12:00 AM
This Wednesday! Join us and the @nyhistory.bsky.social for a FREE virtual event on mediums, Spiritualism, and women's history. Celebrating our book's first anniversary with the wonderful folks at the NY Historical!

Register here:

www.nyhistory.org/programs/med...
Mediums of Change: Women, Spiritualism, and Social Reform | The New York Historical
The Page Act of 1875 forbade the entry of Chinese women based on assumptions of immorality and was the first restrictive federal immigration law in the United States.
www.nyhistory.org
October 26, 2025 at 6:49 PM
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@dig-history.bsky.social is wide ranging in topics and a fun listen.
October 10, 2025 at 4:28 PM
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Yesssssssss! I can't wait to listen to this! My very first grad student research paper was on early 20thC. Black murder ballads.
October 13, 2025 at 1:29 PM
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Neko Case really cornered the market on murder ballads
www.youtube.com/watch?v=nAG-...
October 13, 2025 at 1:32 PM
You’re Bound to Die: The Long History of the Americal Murder Ballad

If you look through recordings of country, western, and folk music ranging from the 1920s and 1930s through to present, you’ll notice a theme: songs about crime, murder, and executions are ever-present. From Grayson & Whittier’s…
You’re Bound to Die: The Long History of the Americal Murder Ballad
If you look through recordings of country, western, and folk music ranging from the 1920s and 1930s through to present, you’ll notice a theme: songs about crime, murder, and executions are ever-present. From Grayson & Whittier’s recording of the centuries-old ballad “Rose Connelly” in 1927, to Lloyd Wilson’s “Stagger Lee”recorded in the 1950s, Bob Dylan’s “The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll”in the 1960s, to Johnny Cash’s “Delia’s Gone”in the 1990s, to Jason Isbell’s “Live Oak” or “Yvette”or Zach Bryan’s “Birmingham” in more recent years, songs about the murder are a staple of the American musical tradition.
digpodcast.org
October 13, 2025 at 1:27 PM
Sarah and Elizabeth were interviewed for a recent episode of @pbs.org Chronicles - check them out, showcasing our Spiritualist history expertise! (and Civil War, because duh, Sarah ;P) www.pbs.org/video/kellar...
Chronicles | Kellar: The Greatest American Magician | Season 3 | Episode 7
Harry Kellar was an American magician born in Erie, Pa.
www.pbs.org
October 1, 2025 at 3:49 PM
Suffer a Witch to Live? Religious Conflict and Witchcraft Persecutions; or, No One Expects the Inquisition

How would you expect the Spanish Inquisition to treat a confessed witch? Does the suggestion conjure visions of fire, torture, and lots of murdered women? You aren’t alone - but this is a…
Suffer a Witch to Live? Religious Conflict and Witchcraft Persecutions; or, No One Expects the Inquisition
How would you expect the Spanish Inquisition to treat a confessed witch? Does the suggestion conjure visions of fire, torture, and lots of murdered women? You aren’t alone - but this is a history we definitely need to unpack.  Transcript for: Suffer a Witch to Live? Religious Conflict and Witchcraft Persecutions; or, No One Expects the Inquisition Researched and written by Averill Earls, PhD…
digpodcast.org
September 29, 2025 at 12:01 AM
We're officially members of the very cool #Amplify network - joining a small group of scholars with a collective commitment to the Mandate of the Amplify project: open scholarship and critical pedagogy rooted in anti-racism and feminist social justice. www.amplifypodcastnetwork.ca/sustain-stream
Sustain Stream — Amplify Podcast Network
www.amplifypodcastnetwork.ca
September 19, 2025 at 12:57 PM
Yellow Rose of Texas: Myth-making and Race in the 19th Century

Today we're exploring one of Texas's most enduring legends - the story of the "Yellow Rose of Texas" and her supposed role in the Battle of San Jacinto. We are going to unravel the myth of “The Yellow Rose of Texas.” We will explore…
Yellow Rose of Texas: Myth-making and Race in the 19th Century
Today we're exploring one of Texas's most enduring legends - the story of the "Yellow Rose of Texas" and her supposed role in the Battle of San Jacinto. We are going to unravel the myth of “The Yellow Rose of Texas.” We will explore the woman at the heart of the tale, Emily D. West, who was a free woman of color working in Texas, and untangle her real life from the Texan myth.
digpodcast.org
September 16, 2025 at 12:01 AM
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This was a fun one to record! Marissa writes some of my fave episodes
September 1, 2025 at 10:22 PM
Whispers and Wives’ Tales: A History of Women & Gossip in Premodern Society

Whispers and Wives' Tales: A History of Women & Gossip in Premodern Society Written by Marissa Rhodes, PhD Recorded by Marissa Rhodes, PhD and Averill Earls, PhD Marissa: On September 9, 1838, a humble woman named Mary…
Whispers and Wives’ Tales: A History of Women & Gossip in Premodern Society
Whispers and Wives' Tales: A History of Women & Gossip in Premodern Society Written by Marissa Rhodes, PhD Recorded by Marissa Rhodes, PhD and Averill Earls, PhD Marissa: On September 9, 1838, a humble woman named Mary Grout descended the stairs outside of her cramped apartment on Rich-street in the poverty-stricken Limehouse district of London. She was visiting her neighbor, Sara Tarrall who lived two floors below her.
digpodcast.org
September 1, 2025 at 12:00 AM
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One way to understand this Health Bizarre guy is to read Teddy Roosevelt’s “Strenuous Life” speech.
August 30, 2025 at 8:34 PM
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@dig-history.bsky.social has a fantabulous episode on the @nationalparks.bsky.social that features this speech. Thank you, intrepid historians!
August 30, 2025 at 8:36 PM
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Treat yourself to some smart, smart, smart thinking about what we really do as historians & as teachers: "Rule One in the Intro to Art History class that I teach is: these things on the slides here are not the works of art that you're studying; they're digital copies of them." #MedievalSky
August 30, 2025 at 7:17 PM
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📢Book Event📢

Join us next Thursday for a discussion with @aearls.bsky.social and @jaretthenderson.bsky.social about Earls' latest work Love in the Lav: A Social Biography of Same Sex Desire in Ireland, 1922-1972

📅Thursday, Sep 4
⏰9amPT/12pmET

Free and open to the public
Info and RSVP at the link!
Love in the Lav with Averill Earls | NACBS
Join NACBS to celebrate the publication of Love in the Lav: A Social Biography of Same-Sex Desire in Ireland, 1922-1972.
www.nacbs.org
August 28, 2025 at 5:30 PM
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The #CFP for the Queer/Trans History Conference #QTHC2026 is live, and submissions are due in November. We hope you can all join us in Michigan for a fantastic conference! lgbtq-ha.org/conferences/...
Queer/Trans History Conference 2026 | LGBTQ+ History Association
lgbtq-ha.org
August 19, 2025 at 6:01 PM
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I love assigning @dig-history.bsky.social to my students! I have assigned multiple episodes for my History of Sex honors course this fall.
August 18, 2025 at 3:01 PM
Women and Slavery: How Harriet Jacobs Revealed Women’s Experience of American Enslavement

In 1861, one of the most powerful slave narratives in American history was published under the title, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl... [listen now] digpodcast.org/2025/08/17/w...
Women and Slavery: How Harriet Jacobs Revealed Women’s Experience of American Enslavement
In 1861, one of the most powerful slave narratives in American history was published under the title, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, written by Harriet Jacobs and edited by the famous aboli…
digpodcast.org
August 18, 2025 at 3:20 AM
We've got over 100 history podcasts featured here. We especially love other academic history podcasts - like our friends at amplifypodcastnetwork.ca, so let us know if you'd like to be included!
August 18, 2025 at 3:10 AM
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My latest on the podcast
August 4, 2025 at 1:11 AM
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@dig-history.bsky.social has EXCELLENT, digestible work on this history. One of them just wrote a book called The Sentimental State, about the origins of the labor movement in textile mills.

They are 4 history professors, all women, with a mix of different subspecialties.

digpodcast.org/about-us/
About Us
Your Historians Dig: A History Podcast is a narrative-driven, open access, and accessible digital history project bridging the worlds of popular and academic history with an explicitly feminist per…
digpodcast.org
August 4, 2025 at 6:16 PM
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Headed to New York state this weekend for a family event and taking my last #AHAReads book with me.

To fulfill the task “Read an edited collection, journal forum, or other multiauthor work,” I’ll be reading the @dig-history.bsky.social historians dig into Lily Dale, NY, and its 19th-c. history.
August 14, 2025 at 7:53 PM