What can radio broadcasts, school curriculums and letters to the headmistress tell us about everyday experiences of mass education in 20th century Britain?
Dr Nathaniel Andrews is joined by Dr Laura Carter for a discussion of her fascinating research on British mass education and the everyday . Tune in to hear Dr Carter’s thoughts on the role of everyday life history in pedagogic practice, the ways in which class, gender and race influenced the curriculum and classroom experiences of 20th century British students, and how changing everyday interactions with the environment can be seen in an educational setting.
More information about Dr Laura Carter can be found here: https://larca.u-paris.fr/en/membre/carter-laura-en/
Miniatures is the podcast of the ERC-funded ‘Dictatorship as Experience’ project at the University of St Andrews. We show how the big picture in history is best seen through the assemblage of individual and local stories, what the German historian Alf Lüdtke called ‘miniatures’. At Miniatures, we forego a studio model and instead adopt a ‘guerrilla’ approach to podcasting, grabbing interviews on handheld recorders with busy researchers whenever and wherever we can find them: in their offices, at conferences, or at a distance via video chat. Please do excuse any sound-based issues that may occur as a result of this method. To learn more about the wider project, visit: https://arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Key words: Miniatures, Everyday Life History, Everyday Dictatorship Project, education, secondary school, radio, environment, gender, race, imperialism, class, childhood, pupils, letters, archives, history, everyday life, history, podcast.
What can the act of waiting tell us about the everyday lives and emotions of those living in informal settlements around the world?
Dr Ushehwedu Kufakurinani is joined by Dr Joseph Mujere for a fascinating discussion of Dr Mujere’s work on everyday interactions in South Africa’s Platinum Belt. Listen to hear all about Dr Mujere’s experiences undertaking oral history and ethnographic research in South Africa’s platinum mining communities, the challenges of studying often ephemeral informal settlement sites, and the power of waiting as both subject and experience in South Africa’s mining regions.
More information about Dr Jospeh Mujere can be found here: https://www.york.ac.uk/history/people/mujere/#profile-content
Miniatures is the podcast of the ERC-funded ‘Dictatorship as Experience’ project at the University of St Andrews. We show how the big picture in history is best seen through the assemblage of individual and local stories, what the German historian Alf Lüdtke called ‘miniatures’. At Miniatures, we forego a studio model and instead adopt a ‘guerrilla’ approach to podcasting, grabbing interviews on handheld recorders with busy researchers whenever and wherever we can find them: in their offices, at conferences, or at a distance via video chat. Please do excuse any sound-based issues that may occur as a result of this method. To learn more about the wider project, visit: https://arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Miniatures is Back! New episodes every 2nd Monday, starting this week!
What can couscous, Soul Food and meat-free meals tell us about the everyday lives of people in the past? Prof. Kate Ferris is joined by Dr Sarah Frank and Dr Peggy Brunache to explore all things food history! Tune in as they discuss everyday food practices, agency and power among French Colonial POWs in WW2, citizens of Fascist Italy, and enslaved people in the Atlantic Slave Trade, and find out why Slave Cuisine is such an important concept and why we should all be thinking more about our meals.
More information about Dr Peggy Brunache can be found here: https://www.gla.ac.uk/schools/humanities/staff/peggybrunache/
And about Dr Sarah Frank, here: https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/hpdh/people/history-staff/sarah-frank
This podcast was originally recorded as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Prof. Kate Ferris
Produced by: Islay Shelbourne
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes
What can the everyday practices of people at the Zimbabwe-Mozambique border reveal about challenges to state power and state definitions of criminality? Dr Ushehwedu Kufakurinani is joined by Nicholas Nyachega to discuss Nyachega’s fascinating work on the Honde Valley and the Zimbabwe-Mozambique borderlands. Nyachega introduces us to the Honde Valley as an example of a contested space, in which local practices and customs challenge state definitions of legal border crossing as enforced by patrols and criminal convictions. Tune in for discussions of research methods, ethics and Nyachega’s call for new ways of interpreting and accessing the past in a postcolonial context.
More information about Nicholas Nyachega can be found https://icgc.umn.edu/nicholas-nyachega
This podcast was originally published on 26th March 2024 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Ushehwedu Kufakurinani
Produced by: Islay Shelbourne
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes
Statement following the death of Pilar Gonzalbo Aizpuru (1935-2024)
We would like to express our deepest condolences to the family, friends, colleagues, and students of Dr. Pilar Gonzalbo Aizpuru who sadly passed away on the 26th of February 2024, at the age of 89. Pilar Gonzalbo Aizpuru was a pioneer in the history of everyday life and, as we discuss with our guest in this episode, her work has had a considerable influence on historical scholarship in Latin America and beyond. Pilar Gonzalbo Aizpuru will continue to inspire historians on both sides of the Atlantic, and this episode is dedicated to her.
How have Mexican scholars approached the complex world of everyday life histories? Dr Nathaniel Andrews is joined by Dr Alfredo Ruiz Islas for a wide-ranging discussion on the origins, methodological approaches and key works within the field of Mexican Everyday Life History. Dr Ruiz Islas takes us through the development of the discipline and introduces us to the seminal work of one of its founding members – Dr Pilar Gonzalbo Aizpuru. Tune in for discussions of sources, interdisciplinary challenges and the way in which colonial experiences influence both the realities and studies of everyday life in Mexico.
More information about Alfredo Ruiz Islas can be found here: https://iberoamericana.academia.edu/AlfredoRuizIslas
This podcast was originally published on 26th February 2024 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Nathaniel Andrews
Produced by: Islay Shelbourne
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes)
What can a children’s essay assignment tell us about the hopes and dreams of a generation of schoolgirls? Dr Huw Halstead is joined by Professor Claire Langhamer and Professor Hester Barron to discuss their book ‘Class of ’37: Voices from Working-class Girlhood’, published in 2021. Hester and Claire take us through the writing of the book, from the use of mass observation reports and the essay prompts of a classroom of schoolgirls in Bolton, to oral history interviews with their descendants and the structural and tense choices made when writing a book their mums could read.
More information about ‘Class of ’37: Voices from Working-class Girlhood’ can be found here: https://www.sussex.ac.uk/broadcast/read/55855
This podcast was originally published on 5th February 2024 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Huw Halstead
Produced by: Islay Shelbourne
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes)
What can drinking customs and advertising company employees wearing cheap shoes tell us about Argentine consumption habits? Dr Nathaniel Andrews is joined by Professor Natalia Milanesio to explore her fascinating work on consumerism, advertising and the everyday in Argentina. Professor Milanesio introduces us to her fascinating work on consumer culture and the everyday in the Argentine and Latin American contexts, including how to find the everyday in both archives and advertising campaigns, the dramatic expansion of consumption practices in Argentina under Perón, the relation between consumption and gender norms in mid-20th century Argentina, and the role of food within the study of Latin American consumerism, advertising and everyday life.
More information on Professor Milanesio’s work and publications can be found at www.ucl.ac.uk/americas/people/ac…-natalia-milanesio.
This podcast was originally published on 11th December 2023 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Nathaniel Andrews
Produced by: Islay Shelbourne
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes)
Just why do people travel thousands of kilometers to go to the shops? Dr Ushehwedu Kufakurinani is joined by Dr Nedson Pophiwa to delve into the fascinating world of shopping at the borderlands. Dr Pophiwa takes us to the Zimbabwe-South Africa border towns of Beitbridge and Musina, exposing the realities of cross-border shopping, the complex networks of transport and trade, and the methodological challenges of gathering data at the border.
This podcast was originally published on 27th November 2023 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Ushehwedhu Kufakurinani
Produced by: Islay Shelbourne
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes)
What do hot baths, umbrellas, teenage bedrooms and KPop have in common? Dr Nathaniel Andrews and Islay Shelbourne are joined by Professor Frank Trentmann to discuss all aspects of consumption and the everyday, including methodological challenges, the impact of routinization on everyday energy consumption, and how understanding past consumption practices can help us navigate current and future climate and cost of living crises.
More information about Professor Trentmann and his work can be found at www.bbk.ac.uk/our-staff/profile/…79/frank-trentmann
This podcast was originally published on 13th November 2023 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Nathaniel Andrews and Islay Shelbourne
Produced by: Islay Shelbourne
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes)
How can a group of grandmothers in a town square change your understanding of the place you grew up? Former St Andrews student Patrick Bence-Trower talks to Huw about his experiences creating a documentary on the sociocultural impact of the Francoist penitentiary system, the merits of an ethnokafenological approach to research, and the ways in which his documentary-making experiences allowed him to view his hometown and its occupants in a whole new light.
The article Huw mentioned on the ethnokafenological approach can be found here: “Reclaiming the Land: Belonging, Landscape, and in Situ Displacement on the Plain of Karditsa (Greece).” History and Anthropology 31, no. 5 (October 19, 2020): 643–68.
This podcast was originally published on 1st November 2023 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Huw Halstead
Produced by: Islay Shelbourne
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes)
In this special episode on everyday life in the COVID-19 pandemic recorded during the UK lockdown, Dr Emma Hart (University of Pennsylvania) talks about how the pandemic caused her to reflect differently on the 18th-century diarists she studies, and Prof. Kate Ferris (University of St Andrews) discusses how the insights and conceptual tools of everyday life history can be used to interpret the furore over the Scotch egg and the “substantial meal”.
This podcast was originally published on 8th November 2021 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Huw Halstead
Produced by: Dr Huw Halstead
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes)
A landlady whose miniature silt island was at the centre of an Anglo-French territorial spat. The Scottish noblewoman who freed her kidnapped husband by masterminding an abduction of her own. The Greeks who reach back in time to memories of famine to understand the financial crisis. The ancient potter whose thumbprint has survived the ages. And the temptation of the box marked ‘Happiness’. Join Dr Huw Halstead, Prof. Kate Ferris and Prof. Claire Langhamer for this edited recording of our live podcast at the 2020 Being Human Festival, and dive into these miniature worlds with special guests Dr Akhila Yechury (University of St Andrews), Dr Daniel Knight (University of St Andrews), Dr Amy Blakeway (University of St Andrews), and Prof. Rebecca Sweetman (University of St Andrews).
This podcast was recorded at the Being Human Festival in November 2020, and was originally published on 7th October 2020 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Huw Halstead
Produced by: Dr Huw Halstead
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes)
What’s it like to live in a country dealing with the traumatic aftermath of a genocide? And in a country that also criminalises most public expressions or discussions of ethnicity? Dr Meghan Laws (University of St Andrews) joins us to talk about her work in Rwanda and the ‘hidden transcripts’ of ethnicity that lie beneath the surface of the official ‘ethnic amnesia’.
This podcast was originally published on 25th February 2021 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Huw Halstead
Produced by: Dr Huw Halstead
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes)
Archives may be dusty places, but as Dr Claire Eldridge (University of Leeds) shows us they are far from being dry and emotionless ones. Drawing on her research on Algerian history and French colonialism, Claire discusses first how two groups of postcolonial migrants from Algeria to France remember the colonial past, and second what we can learn about soldiers’ lives during the First World War from the records of military tribunals.
This podcast was originally published on 28th October 2020 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Huw Halstead
Produced by: Dr Huw Halstead
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes)
You’ve heard of ‘Americanisation’, but what about ‘Sovietism’? Dr Nikos Papadogiannis (University of Sterling, formerly Bangor University) describes youth culture, leisure, politics, and sexuality in Cold War Greece in the years after the fall of the Greek military dictatorship in 1974.
This podcast was originally published on 21st October 2020 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Huw Halstead
Produced by: Dr Huw Halstead
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes)
Why did the Italian Fascists excavate Rome? Dr Joshua Arthurs (University of Toronto) talks to us about Fascist archaeology and what this can tell us about how the regime understood the past and envisaged the future, as well as introducing us to his latest research on everyday life during the 45 days in 1943 when it seemed that Fascist rule was over.
This podcast was originally published on 7th October 2020 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Huw Halstead
Produced by: Dr Huw Halstead
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes)
What’s the secret to everyday happiness? Prof Claire Langhamer (Institute of Historical Research) joins us to discuss this question as well as love, agony aunts, the concept of ‘ordinary people’, and the importance of reliable stationary.
This podcast was originally published on 7th October 2020 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Huw Halstead
Produced by: Dr Huw Halstead
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes)
What can we learn from studying small, localised, and perhaps seemingly inconsequential incidents? Prof. Kate Ferris and Dr Huw Halstead unpick some compelling stories that reveal the richness and texture of everyday life history. Featuring special guests Prof Claire Langhamer (Institute of Historical Research, formerly University of Sussex), Dr Claire Eldridge (University of Leeds), Prof John Bennet (British School at Athens/University of Sheffield), Dr Claudio Hernández-Burgos (University of Granada), and Dr Joshua Arthurs (University of Toronto, formerly West Virginia University).
This podcast was originally published on 30th September 2020 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Huw Halstead and Prof Kate Ferris.
Produced by: Dr Huw Halstead
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes)
We all experience everyday life – but just what exactly is it? Prof. Kate Ferris and Dr Huw Halstead discuss what it means to study ‘everyday life’ in the past and why this is such an engaging yet challenging kind of history. They are joined by special guests Prof Claire Langhamer (Institute of Historical Research, formerly University of Sussex), Dr Claire Eldridge (University of Leeds), Prof John Bennet (British School at Athens/University of Sheffield), Dr Nikos Papadogiannis (Bangor University), Dr Claudio Hernández-Burgos (University of Granada), and Dr Joshua Arthurs (University of Toronto, formerly West Virginia University).
This podcast was originally published on 23rd September 2020 as part of the ERC research project ‘Dictatorship as experience: A comparative history of everyday life and the ‘lived experience’ of dictatorship in Mediterranean Europe (1922-1975)’ led by Prof. Kate Ferris at the University of St Andrews. To learn more about the wider project, visit: arts.st-andrews.ac.uk/everyday-dictatorship/
Hosted by: Dr Huw Halstead and Prof Kate Ferris.
Produced by: Dr Huw Halstead
Music by: Oi Palaiológoi (Violin - Roddy Beaton, Outi - David Hughes)