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Jacke Wilson

Jacke Wilson

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  • October 10, 2018

    The History of Literature #163 – Gabriel García Márquez (with Sarah Bird)

    http://traffic.megaphone.fm/ADL5528223655.mp3 In this episode, Jacke welcomes author Sarah Bird to the program to talk about her background, her writing, and her readerly passion for the fiction of the great twentieth-century novelist, Gabriel García Márquez. GABRIEL GARCÍA MÁRQUEZ (1927-2014) was one of the most revered and influential novelists of the twentieth century. Born in a small Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, Fiction, history of literature, novelists, Podcast, Writing
    100 years of solitude, daughter of a daughter of a queen, Gabriel García Márquez, love in the time of cholera, magical realism, sarah bird, wizard of oz
  • October 7, 2018

    162 Ernest Hemingway

    http://traffic.megaphone.fm/ADL5052941823.mp3 Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961) was one of the most famous American writers of the twentieth century. His plain, economical prose style–inspired by journalism and the King James Bible, with an assist from the Cezannes he viewed in Gertrude Stein’s apartment–became a hallmark of modernism and changed the course of American literature. In this episode, Jacke Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, Podcast, Writing
    bullfighting, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, the lost generation, the sun also rises
  • October 6, 2018

    161 Voltaire

    http://traffic.megaphone.fm/ADL9193713738.mp3 Voltaire was born Francois Marie Arouet in 1694 in Paris, France, the son of a respectable but not particularly eminent lawyer. By the time he died at the age of 83, he was widely regarded as one of the greatest French writers in history, a distinction he still holds today. Astoundingly prolific, he is Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, Podcast, Writing
    candide, lottery, satire, seventeenth century, voltaire
  • September 21, 2018

    The History of Literature #160 – Ray Bradbury (with Carolyn Cohagan)

    http://traffic.megaphone.fm/ADL4719308449.mp3 Special guest Carolyn Cohagan, author of the Time Zero trilogy and founder of the creative writing workshop Girls with Pens, joins Jacke for a discussion of her writing process, her origins in standup comedy and theater, and her early love for the fiction of Ray Bradbury (and her special appreciation for his short story “All Summer Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, novelists, Writing
    fahrenheit 451, fantasy, Ray Bradbury, Science fiction, time zero
  • September 19, 2018

    The History of Literature #159 – Herman Melville

    http://traffic.megaphone.fm/ADL9179456128.mp3 Today, Herman Melville (1819-1891) is considered one of the greatest of American writers, and a leading candidate for THE American novelist thanks to his classic work, Moby-Dick. How did this unpromising student become one of the most inventive and observant writers of his time? What obstacles did he face, and what did he do Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, novelists, Podcast, Uncategorized
    Bartleby the Scrivener, herman melville, Ishmael, Moby-Dick, mystic seaport, nathaniel hawthorne
  • September 14, 2018

    The History of Literature #158 – “The Things They Carried” by Tim O’Brien

    http://traffic.megaphone.fm/ADL3236940460.mp3 In the 1960s and ’70s, the Vietnam War dominated the hearts and minds of a generation of Americans. In 1990, the American writer Tim O’Brien, himself a former soldier, published “The Things They Carried,” a short story that became an instant classic. Through its depiction of the members of a platoon in Vietnam, told Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, Writing
    America, Short Stories, tim o’brien, twentieth century, vietnam, war
  • August 31, 2018

    The History of Literature #157 – Travel Books (with Mike Palindrome)

    http://traffic.megaphone.fm/ADL1955560639.mp3 “The world is a book,” said Augustine, “and those who do not travel read only one page.” But what about books ABOUT traveling? Do they double the pleasure? Transport us to a different place? Inspire and enchant? Or are they more like a forced march through someone else’s interminable photo album? Mike Palindrome, President Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, Writing
    America, europe, guidebooks, summer reading, tibet, travel literature
  • August 25, 2018

    The History of Literature #156 – The Sonnet

    http://traffic.megaphone.fm/ADL3663385565.mp3 “A sonnet,” said the poet Dante Gabriel Rossetti, “is a moment’s monument.” But who invented the sonnet? Who brought it to prominence? How has it changed over the years? And why does this form continue to be so compelling? In this episode of the History of Literature, we take a brief look at one Continue reading

    Arts, books, history of literature, Podcast
    Forms, giacomo da lentini, Poetry, Shakespeare, sonnets
  • August 20, 2018

    The History of Literature #155 – Plato

    http://traffic.megaphone.fm/ADL3663385565.mp3   “The safest general characterization of the European philosophical tradition,” said Alfred North Whitehead, “is that it consists of a series of footnotes to Plato.” We’ve all heard the name of Plato and his famous mentor Socrates, and most of us have encountered the dialogues, a literary-philosophical form he essentially invented. We know the Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, history of literature, Writing
    Aristotle, crito, plato, republic, Socrates, theory of forms
  • August 12, 2018

    The History of Literature #154 – John Milton

    http://traffic.megaphone.fm/ADL4902521222.mp3 John Milton (1608 – 1674) was a revolutionary, a republican, an iconoclast, a reformer, and a  brilliant polemicist, who fearlessly took on both church and king. And he ranks among the greatest poets of all time, a peer of Shakespeare and Homer. Philip Pullman, the author who named his trilogy (His Dark Materials) after Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, history of literature, Podcast
    blindness, john milton, oliver cromwell, paradise lost, Poetry, seventeenth century
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Help support the show at patreon.com/literature or historyofliterature.com/shop. The History of Literature Podcast is a member of Lit Hub Radio and the Podglomerate Network. Learn more at www.thepodglomerate.com/historyofliterature.

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  • The History of Literature #524 — Growing Old with The Graduate – Mike Nichols, Roger Ebert, Charles Webb, and Me
  • The History of Literature #523 — Geoffrey Chaucer (with Marion Turner) | A New Podcast About the 1968 Memphis Sanitation Strike (with AFSCME President Lee Saunders)
  • The History of Literature #522 — Class, Whiteness, and Southern Literature (with Jolene Hubbs) | My Last Book with Mark Cirino
  • The History of Literature #521 — The Empress Messalina (with Honor Cargill-Martin) | My Last Book with Robert Chandler
  • The History of Literature #520 — “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” by Ambrose Bierce

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Recent Posts

  • The History of Literature #524 — Growing Old with The Graduate – Mike Nichols, Roger Ebert, Charles Webb, and Me
  • The History of Literature #523 — Geoffrey Chaucer (with Marion Turner) | A New Podcast About the 1968 Memphis Sanitation Strike (with AFSCME President Lee Saunders)
  • The History of Literature #522 — Class, Whiteness, and Southern Literature (with Jolene Hubbs) | My Last Book with Mark Cirino

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