Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
Sports
History
News
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts211/v4/5f/d3/fe/5fd3fe50-9d0e-a190-2d5c-68336865b448/mza_15035482799436409762.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Information Please
OTRPODS
100 episodes
3 weeks ago
Show more...
Society & Culture
Arts
RSS
All content for Information Please is the property of OTRPODS and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Show more...
Society & Culture
Arts
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts211/v4/5f/d3/fe/5fd3fe50-9d0e-a190-2d5c-68336865b448/mza_15035482799436409762.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
December 13, 1943: Exiles, Clocks, and Conferences with Quincy Howe & T. F. Tsiang
Information Please
28 minutes
1 month ago
December 13, 1943: Exiles, Clocks, and Conferences with Quincy Howe & T. F. Tsiang
In this December 13, 1943, episode of Information Please, Clifton Fadiman moderates regulars Franklin P. Adams and John Kieran with two distinguished guests: news commentator Quincy Howe and diplomat-scholar T. F. Tsiang. The panel ricochets from literature to geopolitics—quoting Shakespeare and Confucius, revisiting wartime maps, and trading quips about clocks, conferences, and courtship—while Heinz’s sponsor spots keep the proceedings savory.   Highlights include: authors “about man” (Hamlet’s “What a piece of work,” Confucius via the Analects, and Gilbert & Sullivan’s Princess Ida); territories to be taken from Japan (Mandate islands; Manchuria, Formosa, Pescadores; Guam/Wake); and literary parenthood (Lady Macbeth, Madame Bovary, Peggotty). The crew recalls Lincoln refusing to sack Grant over whiskey, Perry at Nagasaki, and Columbus pressing on; then maps famed journeys (the 622 Hijra from Mecca to Medina; de Soto’s El Dorado; Sir John Franklin’s Northwest Passage). They trace exiles who lived in America—Dr. Sun Yat-sen, Garibaldi (Staten Island), and Trotsky—swap poetic timepieces and “by/to/from sea” lines, tick off wartime conferences (Mena House near Cairo; Quebec’s Château Frontenac; Moscow’s Spiridonovka House), and close with literary lovers who couldn’t quite propose (Cyrano, Sydney Carton, and Miles Standish/John Alden).  
Information Please