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Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Tianna Mobley
32 episodes
2 months ago
Tianna Mobley is a Ph.D. student of History at Yale University and a Fellow at Humanity in Action. "Untold Histories of the Atlantic World" explores topics such as slavery, colonialism, and Indigenous rights throughout the Atlantic world encompassing Africa, Europe, and the Americas. This podcast invites academic scholars, literary scholars, and activists as guests. 
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History
Society & Culture,
Science,
Social Sciences
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All content for Untold Histories of the Atlantic World is the property of Tianna Mobley 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.
Tianna Mobley is a Ph.D. student of History at Yale University and a Fellow at Humanity in Action. "Untold Histories of the Atlantic World" explores topics such as slavery, colonialism, and Indigenous rights throughout the Atlantic world encompassing Africa, Europe, and the Americas. This podcast invites academic scholars, literary scholars, and activists as guests. 
Show more...
History
Society & Culture,
Science,
Social Sciences
Episodes (20/32)
Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Black Activism During Brazil’s Authoritarian Period
In this episode, we discuss the history of Black activism in Brazil during the authoritarian period (1964–1986). Joining me is Marcelo Jose Domingos.

Marcelo graduated with his Ph.D. in Latin American history from the University of Texas at Austin. He focused on contemporary history, the Cold War, the 1980s, and the complexities of twenty-first-century geopolitics in Latin America. His research interests also include examining the intersections of race, culture, and politics, particularly as they relate to black activism and the Brazilian dictatorship's intelligence files. Before pursuing his doctoral studies, Marcelo worked for several years in archives management, research, history, and education. He has taught various subjects from high school to college, including international relations, global history, and Brazilian history. Additionally, Marcelo holds an MA in Cultural History from the University of Brasília (UNB) in Brazil, where he deepened his knowledge of popular music and media interactions. Regarding his academic research, Marcelo’s work on Black activism in Brazil during the authoritarian period is particularly critical, as there are very few investigations on this subject, and moreover, his research is unique in that it draws extensively upon declassified government files.
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2 months ago
58 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Pre-Contact Indigenous North America
In this episode, we discuss the pre-contact Indigenous history of North America. In this episode, we examine how this deep history relates to the contact period, all while situating this discussion within a broad framework of Atlantic World history. Joining me is Isra Henson. Isra is a first-year M.A. student studying under the supervision of Professor Nancy E. van Deusen. She completed her BAH in History at Queen’s University and decided to continue her studies there. She focuses on North and South American Indigenous history, specifically contact and early colonization. 
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4 months ago
20 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Representing Africans in Early Modern Dutch Prints
In this episode, Arianna Ray joins me in conversation about the history of representations of Africans in early modern prints within the Dutch Atlantic. Arianna is a PhD candidate in art history at Northwestern University and a current Fulbright Fellow based in the Netherlands. She specializes in early modern Northern European prints in a global context with a particular interest in materiality. Her dissertation, “Paper Skin: Printing Blackness and Materializing Race in the Early Modern Dutch Atlantic,” investigates how the color binary inherent to printmaking epidermalized race in engravings, etchings, and mezzotints of African Diasporic peoples. 
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8 months ago
30 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Cooking the War- Warfare, Diplomacy, and Spirituality in Atlantic Africa
This episode aims to examine The Akantamanso War of 1826 in Ghana in the context of the Atlantic World. Joining me, is  Ishmael Annang. He is a teacher and a historian of society and environment in Africa and the African Atlantic in the Department of History at Georgetown University, Washington D.C. He received both his undergraduate Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) and graduate Master of Philosophy (M.Phil.) degrees in History from the University of Ghana, Legon. He has broad research and teaching interests in Africa, Atlantic Africa, the African Atlantic/Diaspora, oral methodology, Ghana/West Africa, health and healing in Africa, African slavery, and environmental history, particularly how Africa’s environmental setting shaped Atlantic interactions in Africa and its diaspora. He is currently wrapping up his dissertation project which studies Agricultural festivals and Spiritual ecologies in the Volta River basin of Ghana during the early modern period. A spin-off article from this project is forthcoming in the Journal of West African History. His work is also forthcoming in the University of Wisconsin Press. 
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10 months ago
21 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
The Windrush Generation in Scotland
In this episode, Scotland's first Black Professor, Sir Geoff Palmer, joins me in conversation about his personal experiences as part of the Windrush generation in UK history. Sir Palmer is also a leading intellectual on the history of Scotland's involvement in the slave trade.
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1 year ago
25 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Slavery and Colonialism in French Art
In this episode, we will be discussing the history of slavery and colonialism during the early modern period as evidenced through French art. This episode aims to examine slavery and colonialism in the context of the Atlantic World. Joining me, is Professor Meredith Martin. Dr. Martin is a Professor of Art History at New York University and the Institute of Fine Arts. A specialist in early modern French art and empire, she is the co-author (with Gillian Weiss) of the award-winning book The Sun King at Sea: Maritime Art and Galley Slavery in Louis XIV’s France (Getty, 2022).
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1 year ago
45 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Indigenous, Spanish, & African Life in the Greater Antilles
In this episode, my long-time friend and colleague, Amir Blair, will interview me as I present
a book review of Ida Altman’s 2021, Life and Society in the Early Spanish Caribbean: The
Greater Antilles, 1493–1550. Amir obtained his BA in Anthropology from the University of South Florida where he also earned a MA in Library & Information Science. Amir currently works as a User Experience Librarian for North Carolina State University Libraries.
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1 year ago
11 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Ghanaian Women’s Movement
In this episode, we discuss the history of West African women’s transatlantic organizing for rights in West Africa. This episode examines West African women’s mobilization for women’s rights and their links to the wider international women’s movement of the early – mid-twentieth century in the context of the Atlantic World. Joining me, is Aincre Evans. She is pursuing her Ph.D. in History at the University of Oxford, where she is a Black Academic Futures Scholar. She has a Master of Studies in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality from the University of Oxford and an MA in African studies from Leiden University, in The Netherlands. Aincre has lectured on various subjects in the field of African Studies across several universities and began her academic career in The Netherlands, where she co-designed and taught a course titled ‘The Idea of Africa’ for two years before moving to Ghana and working for the Institute of African Studies at Legon.
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1 year ago
25 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Mexico's Green Revolution
In this episode, Gabriel Panuco-Mercado joins me in conversation about his research on the history of Mexico’s Green Revolution. This episode examines gendered and environmental challenges in Mexican cane and maize-producing communities in the context of global agricultural industrialization. Gabriel is a PhD student in Latin American History at Stanford University.
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1 year ago
18 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Urban Slavery in the Bahamas
In this episode, Sasha Wells—MA student from the University of Florida—discusses the history of Urban Slavery in The Bahamas during the Loyalist period (1784-1834) within the context of the Atlantic World.
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2 years ago
26 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Looting in Latin America
In this episode, Roger Atwood joins me in discussing the history of looting in Latin America in the context of the Atlantic World. Roger is the author of "Stealing History: Tomb Raiders, Smugglers, and the Looting of the Ancient World."
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2 years ago
25 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Los Negros Mascogos & Juneteenth
This episode examines the history of Negros Mascogos in Northern Mexico and their celebration of the emancipation of enslaved Black people. Taryn White joins me in a discussion of her article published in National Geographic.
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3 years ago
15 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Puerto Rican Social Movements
In this episode, Miguel Yunda joins me in conversation about the Atlantic history of Puerto Rican social movements.
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3 years ago
30 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
School of Salamanca in Early Latin American Revolutionary Projects
In today’s episode, I discuss the influence of the School of Salamanca in early Latin American revolutionary projects in the context of the Spanish Atlantic World. Joining me, is Johannes Schmidt.
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3 years ago
20 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Atlantic History of Emotions
In this episode, I will be discussing the history of two seventeenth-century slave societies, Providence Island and Cartagena de Indias. This episode aims to examine both societies in the context of the Atlantic World. But we will also be discussing an unusual approach to studying history: writing the history of emotions. Joining me is George Clay.
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3 years ago
27 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Cacao and the Environment in Colonial Equatorial Guinea
In episode 18, I discuss the environmental history of cacao in Equatorial Guinea during the Spanish colonial period. I will be handing over the role of host to my dear friend Bethania Michael, who will interview me for a change.
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3 years ago
21 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
The Atlantic Amazon
This episode aims to examine the history of the Amazonian region in South America as a trans-imperial and transnational space overlooked by the historiographies of Latin America and the Caribbean within the context of the Atlantic World. Joining me, is Manoel Rendeiro Neto.
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3 years ago
35 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Public Memory of Slavery in Rio
In this episode, I discuss the memorialization and public history of Atlantic slavery in Brazil. This episode aims to examine the subaltern institutions contributing to the public memory of Rio de Janeiro in the context of the Atlantic World. Joining me is Joao Sodre.
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3 years ago
30 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Social and Cultural Histories in a Global Atlantic
The focus of this episode is to explore social and cultural world histories alongside the concept of a Global Atlantic History. To do so, the conversation will be divided into two sections: In the first, we will conder the social and cultural roles of women in Atlantic trade, migrations, or diasporas in a global history context. In the second, we will discuss the world/global historian’s toolkit. Joining me in conversation is Professor Merry Wiesner-Hanks.
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3 years ago
45 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Debunking Myths: Slavery in the Cayman Islands 
Today’s episode seeks to debunk myths about the history of slavery in the Cayman Islands in the context of the Atlantic World. Joining me, are Mikana Scott and Katlen Bush.
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4 years ago
24 minutes

Untold Histories of the Atlantic World
Tianna Mobley is a Ph.D. student of History at Yale University and a Fellow at Humanity in Action. "Untold Histories of the Atlantic World" explores topics such as slavery, colonialism, and Indigenous rights throughout the Atlantic world encompassing Africa, Europe, and the Americas. This podcast invites academic scholars, literary scholars, and activists as guests.