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Jacke Wilson

Jacke Wilson

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  • May 16, 2017

    The History of Literature #93 – Robert Frost Finds a Friend

    It’s a curious but compelling story: it starts in the years just before World War I, when struggling poet Robert Frost (1874-1963) hastily packed up his family and moved to London in search of a friend. Although Frost’s efforts to ingratiate himself with W.B. Yeats and Ezra Pound fizzled, he soon found a man, critic Edward Thomas Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, Podcast, Writing
    edward thomas, Ezra Pound, friendship, modernism, Poetry, robert frost, the road not taken, world war i
  • May 12, 2017

    The History of Literature #92 – The Books of Our Lives

      Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 1:04:05 — 44.3MB) | Embed Subscribe: iTunes | Android | Email | RSS | More “In the middle of life’s journey,” wrote Dante Alighieri, “I found myself in a selva oscura.” Host Jacke Wilson and frequent guest Mike Palindrome take stock of their own selva oscura Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, Podcast, Writing
    Alice Munro, elena ferrante, graham greene, haruki murakami, James Boswell and Samuel Johnson, javier marias, Jay McInerney, John D. Fitzgerald, Karl Ove Knausgaard, Leo Tolstoy, lorrie moore, Marcel Proust, Patrick O’Brian, Paul Celan, Rainer Maria Rilke, rene descartes, Thomas Mann
  • May 5, 2017

    History of Literature #91 – In Which John Donne Decides to Write a Poem About a Flea

    Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 48:42 — 33.7MB) | Embed Subscribe: iTunes | Android | Email | RSS | More John Donne (1572-1631) may have been the most wildly inventive poet who ever lived. But that doesn’t mean he was the most successful. Dr. Johnson, writing a hundred years later, objected to Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, history of literature, Podcast, Writing
    dr. johnson, john donne, metaphysical poets, Shakespeare, sonnet 130, t.s. eliot, the flea
  • April 28, 2017

    History of Literature #90 – Mark Twain’s Final Request

      Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 50:31 — 35.5MB) | Embed Subscribe: iTunes | Android | Email | RSS | More In 1910, the American author Mark Twain took to his bed in his Connecticut home. Weakened by disease and no longer able to write, the legendary humorist (and author of The Adventures of Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, Podcast, Writing
    1601, french revolution, huckleberry finn, last words, Mark Twain, obituary, thomas carlyle, tom sawyer
  • April 21, 2017

    History of Literature #89 – Primo Levi

    Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 1:00:28 — 41.8MB) | Embed Subscribe: iTunes | Android | Email | RSS | More Primo Levi (1919-1987) lived quietly and wrote with restraint. An Italian Jewish writer, professional chemist, and Holocaust survivor, he was, said Italo Calvino, “one of the most important and gifted writers of Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, Podcast, Writing
    holocaust, if this is a man, Italy, periodic table, piedmont, primo levi
  • April 14, 2017

    History of Literature #88 – The Harlem Renaissance

    Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 51:41 — 35.8MB) | Embed Subscribe: iTunes | Android | Email | RSS | More The Harlem Renaissance, the great flowering of African American arts and culture in the early twentieth century, is hard to define and easy to admire. Coupled with the Great Migration, in which Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, Podcast, Writing
    bessie smith, countee cullen, duke ellington, harlem, james vanderzee, jean toomer, langston hughes, nella larsen, zora neale hurston
  • April 7, 2017

    History of Literature #87 – Man in Love: The Passions of D.H. Lawrence

    Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 54:08 — 37.4MB) | Embed Subscribe: iTunes | Android | Email | RSS | More The Edwardian novelist D.H. Lawrence (1885-1930) lived and wrote with the fury of a thousand suns. His novels Lady Chatterley’s Lover, Sons and Lovers, Women in Love, and The Rainbow are commonly Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, Podcast, Writing
    apocalypse, ben franklin, D.H. Lawrence, e.m. forster, lady chatterley’s lover, sons and lovers, women in love
  • April 2, 2017

    History of Literature #86 – Don Juan in Literature (aka The Case of the Red-Hot Lover)

    Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 53:17 — 36.9MB) | Embed Subscribe: iTunes | Android | Email | RSS | More From his earliest days as a popular legend, through many appearances in drama and poetry and fiction and film, the sexual conquistador Don Juan has been the vehicle for authors and artists to Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, history of literature, Podcast, Writing
    cheers, don jon, don juan, guilt, hell, lord byron, love, mozart don giovanni, sam malone, sex, sin
  • March 28, 2017

    History of Literature #85 – Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen

    Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 1:06:11 — 45.7MB) | Embed Subscribe: iTunes | Android | Email | RSS | More In 1813, a young author named Jane Austen built on the success of her popular novel Sense and Sensibility with a new novel about the emotional life of an appealing protagonist named Elizabeth Bennet, Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, Fiction, history of literature, novelists, Podcast, Writing
    christmas cotillion, elizabeth bennet, free indirect style, Jane Austen, mr darcy, Pride and Prejudice
  • March 17, 2017

    History of Literature #84 – The Trials of Oscar Wilde

    In February of 1895, the playwright Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) continued an astonishing run of theatrical success with the opening of his artistic masterpiece, The Importance of Being Earnest.  Three months later, he was imprisoned on charges of “gross indecency.” In this special St. Patrick’s Day episode, host Jacke Wilson takes a look at the career of Oscar Continue reading

    Arts, Authors, books, history of literature, Writing
    bosie, gross indecency, importance of being earnest, lord alfred douglas, marquess of queensberry, Oscar Wilde, theater, trials
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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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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
  • 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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