Origins

Origins is a project of the Public History Initiative and eHistory in the History Department at The Ohio State University, edited by Nicholas Breyfogle & Steven Conn.

Each month, an academic expert will analyze a particular current issue –political, cultural, or social –in a larger, deeper context. The final goal of Origins is to make us all more informed, engaged citizens.  As the American philosopher John Dewey wrote, “History which is not brought down close to the actual scene of events leaves a gap.”  We hope Origins will help fill that gap, and we hope you enjoy what you find.

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10:24am

Sat September 15, 2012
Origins Podcast

Socialism Takes Over France, Again?

After François Hollande’s victory in the French presidential elections in May followed by socialist victories in the more recent legislative elections, many commentators declared a decisive swing to the Left in Europe’s second largest economy, at a moment of intense political paralysis in the Eurozone. This month historian Alice Conklin explores why the socialists won now in France, after two decades out of power, and what their return portends for the future of the country.

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10:30am

Wed August 15, 2012
Origins Podcast

From Karl Marx to Karl Rove: “Class Warfare” in American Politics

In the midst of a presidential election campaign that pits a wealthy Republican businessman against a self-proclaimed warrior for the middle class, Americans are talking a lot these days about “class.” Many credit the Occupy Wall Street movement with making “class warfare”—which, in its contemporary use, is really about tax policy—a driving issue in 2012. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels’ original idea of class struggle emerged with the creation of a class of factory wage earners during the Industrial Revolution.

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11:40am

Sun July 15, 2012
Origins Podcast

Russia and the Race for the Arctic

Global climate change has caused unprecedented changes to the Arctic environment, especially a rapid decrease in the summer sea ice sheet. While perilous to the survival of the iconic polar bear, many humans are watching these changes with an eye to what riches an open Arctic Ocean might bring forth: in oil and gas, mining, and open-water transportation. Five countries can lay claim to the potential wealth of the Arctic Ocean: Canada, Denmark, Norway, Russia, and the United States.

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12:06pm

Fri June 15, 2012
Origins Podcast

Syria's Islamist Movement and the 2011-12 Uprising

Credit Elizabeth Arrott.

The events of the "Arab Spring" took the world by surprise. Yet, the roots of those rebellions run deep and nowhere more so than in Syria, where the fighting continues to be fierce and deadly. This month, Fred H. Lawson traces the history of one leading force in the ongoing Syrian uprising: the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood. The Brothers led a violent campaign to overthrow the Syrian regime in the 1970s, but more recently have advanced a platform that calls for liberal reform and constitutional government.

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12:06pm

Tue May 15, 2012
Origins Podcast

Humanitarian Intervention: The American Experience from William McKinley to Barack Obama

Many of us think of humanitarian intervention as a recent phenomenon of United States foreign policy. Certainly, critics of Barack Obama’s intervention in Libya saw America’s humanitarian involvement there as some new-fangled excuse to go mucking around in other countries. This month historian Jeff Bloodworth traces a much longer history of humanitarian intervention that goes back to the administration of William McKinley and is connected with the Protestant ideals of some of the nation's founders.

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