Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by C19 Podcast

Preview
S10 E03 | Part 2: The Hour and the Man: Robert & Catharine Morris's Gifts to Boston College Welcome to a 2-part series on Robert Morris, who was a force for justice in nineteenth-century Boston. He championed school desegregation, defended fugitives from slavery, supported equal rights for w

And don't forget to keep listening!

soundcloud.com/c19podcast/s...

1 week ago 0 0 0 0
Preview
S10 E02 | Part 1: The Hour and the Man: Robert Morris's Legal Legacy Welcome to a 2-part series on Robert Morris, who was a force for justice in nineteenth-century Boston. He championed school desegregation, defended fugitives from slavery, supported equal rights for w

New 2-part episode just dropped! Join Christy Pottroff & Justin Brown-Ramsey to explore Robert Morris's civic advocacy + hear about the archival adventures to recover his family's contributions to Boston College. Get started with Part 1 today! @brown-ramsey.bsky.social
soundcloud.com/c19podcast/s...

1 week ago 0 0 1 1

Happy New Year! As of today, Stefan Schöberlein (Texas A&M–Central Texas) and Jessica Van Gilder (Georgia Tech) are the new co-chairs of the C19 Podcast!

3 months ago 3 1 0 0

Finally had a chance to listen to this while doing some pre-holiday food prep. It's delightful! Check out this great episode of @c19podcast.bsky.social by @ainenorris.bsky.social about one of the "Queens of Ghost-Land," a purported milk-bewitching woman named Sally (Sallie) Friddly.

4 months ago 4 1 1 0
Preview
S09 E05 | Animals in 19th-Century African American Literature This episode features a conversation between Alex Alston, Assistant Professor of Literatures in English at Bryn Mawr College, and Maurice O. Wallace, Professor of English at Rutgers University, New Br

New episode out today featuring Alex Alston (Bryn Mawr College) and Maurice O. Wallace (Rutgers University, New Brunswick)!

4 months ago 7 3 0 0

It's called marketing

5 months ago 17 1 2 0
Preview
S09 E02 | How Do We Teach Literature When Students Won’t Read What We Assign? Podcast Episode · C19: America in the 19th Century · 08/14/2025 · 37m

I tried a couple new things this term. It has been my best term since 2019.

Among my trial runs was self-directed reading, following the advice of Mary Isbell on @c19podcast.bsky.social

I highly recommend this & it should be part of your 2025 best of public humanities, @americanstudier.bsky.social

5 months ago 40 10 1 0
Advertisement

Big thanks to the amazing folks at @c19podcast.bsky.social for letting me babble about Appalachian witchcraft and math. 🖤🖤🖤 It’s an honor to do this work.

5 months ago 3 1 0 0

Who among us &c. &c.

5 months ago 1 0 0 0

The old enchanted milk pail trick. Nice.

5 months ago 7 1 1 0
Preview
S09 E04 | Sally Fridley’s Bewildering Press: Investigating Accusations of Appalachian Witchcraft On this episode, Aíne Norris (Old Dominion University), guides us through one story of an age-old accusation levied against women throughout colonial and early American history: witchcraft. In 1891,

New episode out now! Join Aíne Norris (Old Dominion University) in searching the archives for records of “Sally Friddly” of Potts Creek, Alleghany County, Virginia, who was accused of enchanting a milk pail to steal cream from her neighbors.

5 months ago 11 5 1 3

Our next episode contains a witch! Or does it?

5 months ago 5 1 1 0

If you liked "S03 E02 | Wives and Their Authors: Elizabeth and Herman Melville, Literary Labor, and Women's Work" back in the day, you should read @ishmaelcallme.bsky.social's essay in the latest issue of @j19journal.bsky.social!

6 months ago 6 3 1 0
Paperback book titled "Close Reading for the Twenty-First Century"

Paperback book titled "Close Reading for the Twenty-First Century"

Paperback book titled "Reasons & Feelings: Writing for the Humanities Now"

Paperback book titled "Reasons & Feelings: Writing for the Humanities Now"

The humanities are so hot right now

6 months ago 85 11 1 0

This is my university! Seeking 18th century-ists!

6 months ago 4 3 0 0
Preview
S09 E03 | Chesser & Holly: A Collision of Love, Race, and Law in Nineteenth-Century Arkansas In 1888, James Chesser and Georgianna Holly married in the growing city of Fort Smith, Arkansas. A few months later during James's arrest, courts argued that Georgianna was legally a man. Legal and so

New episode! Join Rachel Trusty (Bucknell University) as she discusses James Chesser and Georgianna Holly's queer marriage in 19th-century Arkansas!
soundcloud.com/c19podcast/s...

6 months ago 4 1 0 0
Advertisement
Preview
2026-2028 Call for Applications: C19 Podcast Subcommittee Call for Applications | C19 Podcast Subcommittee 2026-2028 The C19 Podcast Subcommittee seeks to bring on new members for the 2026-2028 term! We welcome applications from scholars of all ranks who ...

We need new producers to serve on the C19 Podcast Subcommittee for the 2026-2028 term! Send us your applications by 9/29!

7 months ago 4 4 0 0

FWIW, in this course I am trying a version of Mary Isbell’s student-selected reading curriculum.

Too early to say that is why attendance & participation are so strong, but it’s certainly my working thesis.

7 months ago 12 1 1 0
Black cat lying down in a windowsill behind a computer monitor beside a pile of C19 Podcast stickers

Black cat lying down in a windowsill behind a computer monitor beside a pile of C19 Podcast stickers

8 months ago 4 0 0 0

Perfect mid-August listening. You gotta check it out.

8 months ago 9 1 1 0

Excited to dig into this!

8 months ago 2 1 0 0
Preview
Searching for Wonder – Simple Book Publishing Many journeys, one course.

Mary Isbell's book Searching for Wonder: Teaching Literature with Student-Selected Texts is free and available for digital download now! unewhaven.pressbooks.pub/searchingfor...

8 months ago 5 2 0 0
Preview
S09 E02 | How Do We Teach Literature When Students Won’t Read What We Assign? This episode addresses the elephant slouching on its phone in the corner of many literature classrooms. Mary Isbell (University of New Haven) describes her search for a solution to the student reading

New episode! As you compile your syllabus, learn how Mary Isbell (University of New Haven) structures her classroom when students don't read assigned readings. soundcloud.com/c19podcast/s...

8 months ago 28 8 2 4
Preview
Searching for Wonder – Simple Book Publishing Many journeys, one course.

Our next episode is by Mary Isbell, author of Searching for Wonder: Teaching Literature with Student-Selected Texts! Stay tuned! unewhaven.pressbooks.pub/searchingfor...

8 months ago 2 0 0 0
Advertisement
Preview
S09 E01 | Just Add Nutmeg: YouTube, Nostalgia, and the Fantasy of Early America In this episode, Christopher Douglas (Jacksonville State University) leads Ashley Rattner (Jacksonville State University) through some of the most popular late 18th and early 19th-century content avai

"I started watching this during the pandemic, as, oh, I can't go outside my house, but I can watch this guy make me an 18th century boiled apple inside of a bit of a dough and call it a pudding. And you know what, that's something." –Christopher Douglas (Jacksonville State University)

9 months ago 1 0 0 0

I got a lot of thoughts.... right now I'm at the overview of the earliest content period of the channel. I watched back then. I forgot about those episodes in that 2014-16ish period. I stopped watching when it moved away from that presentation style getting away from going to sites and experts.

9 months ago 5 2 1 0
Preview
S09 E01 | Just Add Nutmeg: YouTube, Nostalgia, and the Fantasy of Early America In this episode, Christopher Douglas (Jacksonville State University) leads Ashley Rattner (Jacksonville State University) through some of the most popular late 18th and early 19th-century content avai

"Never forget that no peer-reviewed journal article you ever write will reach as many people as an ASMR video about making an 1807 version of macaroni and cheese."

9 months ago 37 10 2 1

In this episode, Christopher Douglas (Jacksonville State University) leads Ashley Rattner (Jacksonville State University) through some of the most popular late 18th- and early 19th-century content available on YouTube: period cooking recreation!

9 months ago 1 0 0 0
S09 E01 | Just Add Nutmeg: YouTube, Nostalgia, and the Fantasy of Early America In this episode, Christopher Douglas (Jacksonville State University) leads Ashley Rattner (Jacksonville State University) through some of the most popular late 18th and early 19th-century content avai

"Never forget that no peer-reviewed journal article you ever write will reach as many people as an ASMR video about making an 1807 version of macaroni and cheese."

9 months ago 3 1 1 0