The Constitution is Amazing (and Ridiculous), Part One: A Troubled, Ambitious Origin Story

The Constitution is Amazing (and Ridiculous),...

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Was 536 Really the Worst Year in History?

Welcome to the end of the year, fellow Ridiculous Historians! As Ben, Noel and Max look back on the events of 2025, they discovered historians do, in fact, have one year singled out as "the worst year in human history." But... why? Join the guys as they explore how DXXXVI absolut ...  Afficher plus

CLASSIC: Clara, The World's Most Famous Rhinoceros

For centuries most people in Europe thought of rhinos as another form of mythical creature, like unicorns or griffins. However, this all changed when an enterprising sea captain brought a young, orphaned rhino named Clara back to his home country after his travels abroad. It's of ...  Afficher plus

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Why Constitutions Matter
TALKING POLITICS

David talks to historian Linda Colley about her new global history of written constitutions: the paper documents that made and remade the modern world. From Corsica to Pitcairn, from Mexico to Japan, it's an amazing story of war and peace, violence, imagination and fear. Recorded ...  Afficher plus

The Shadows of the Constitution (2020)
Throughline

The Constitution is like America's secular bible, our sacred founding document. In her play, What the Constitution Means to Me, Heidi Schreck goes through a process of discovering what the document is really about – who wrote it, who it was for, who it protected and who it didn't ...  Afficher plus

Liberals Need a Clearer Vision of the Constitution. Here’s What It Could Look Like.
The Ezra Klein Show

For decades now, the conservative legal movement has been on a mission to remake this nation’s laws from the bench. And it’s working. On Friday we released an episode with th ...

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Christopher Capozzola, “Uncle Sam Wants You: World War I and the Making of The Modern American Citizen” (Oxford UP, 2008)
New Books in Military History

I confess I sometimes wonder where we got in the habit of proclaiming, usually with some sort of righteous indignation, that we have the “right” to this or that as citizens. I know that the political theorists of the eighteenth century wrote a lot about “rights,” and that “rights ...  Afficher plus