Sinopse
The FHQ podcasts provide listeners with insight on the content published in the Florida Historical Quarterly and the authors and others who help create it. Published four times annually, the FHQ promotes scholarly research and appreciation for the peoples, places, and diversity of Florida's past.
Episódios
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Episode 15: Fall 2012
15/04/2014We interviewed Matthew G. Hyland from Duquesne University, about his article “The Florida Keys Hurricane House: Post-Disaster New Deal Housing.” The article, featured in this issue, is about hurricane houses during the Depression Era in Key West.
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Episode 14: Summer 2012
15/04/2014This episode features FHQ Assistant Editor Dr. Daniel Murphree’s interview of Professor Claire Strom, Rapetti-Trunzo Professor of History at Rollins College, about her article “Controlling Venereal Disease in Orlando during World War II.” The article is about Orlando's reaction and policies toward venereal disease and women's sexuality during World War II, and it was published in this issue.
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Episode 13: Spring 2012
15/04/2014We interviewed Professor David Jackson Jr. from Florida A & M University, about his article “Industrious, Thrifty and Ambitious”: Jacksonville’s African American Businesspeople during the Jim Crow Era,” which appeared in this issue. It is about the business class of Jacksonville during the Jim Crow Era. We also interviewed Tina Bucuvalas, who was the 2012 Jillian Prescott Memorial Keynote Speaker at the Florida Historical Society Meeting and Symposium in Tampa.
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Episode 12: Winter 2012
14/04/2014This episode features interviews with the guest editors of the special issue, Julian C. Chambliss and Denise K. Cummings, speaking about their article, “Florida: The Mediated State.” The entire issue is dedicated to an examination of how cultural actors have defined the way that we imagine Florida through popular culture.
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Episode 11: Fall 2011
14/04/2014This episode features interviews with all of the contributors for this special issue on the West Florida Revolt of 1810: “Introduction: Setting a Precedent for Regional Revolution: The West Florida Revolt Considered,” by Samuel C. Hyde, Jr., “Some Thoughts on Spanish East and West Florida as Borderlands,” by James G. Cusick, “The Origins of the Monroe Doctrine Revisited: The Madison Administration, the West Florida Revolt, and the No Transfer Policy,” by William S. Belko, and “The Rise and Fall of the Original Lone Star State: Infant American Imperialism Ascendant in West Florida,” by Cody Scallions. The entire issue is dedicated the global context and impact of the revolt from a variety of different perspectives.
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Episode 10: Summer 2011
14/04/2014This podcast features an interview with James M. (Mike) Denham, whose article “Crime and Punishment in Antebellum Pensacola” appeared in this issue. Professor Denham is the Director of Lawton M. Chiles Center for Florida History at Florida Southern College. In addition, we interviewed Professor Raymond A. Mohl, Distinguished Professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, about the life and legacy of Stetson Kennedy who passed away on August 27, 2011, at the age of 94.
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Episode 09: Spring 2011
14/04/2014This podcast is about a special issue devoted to literature in Florida. Dr. Connie Lester, Editor of the Florida Historical Quarterly, interviewed Rebecca Sharpless, Associate Professor of History at Texas Christian University, about her article titled “The Servants and Mrs. Rawlings: Martha Mickens and African American Life at Cross Creek.”
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Episode 08: Winter 2011
14/04/2014We interviewed Jessica Clawson, a graduate student at the University of Florida, about her article “Administrative Recalcitrance and Government Intervention: Desegregation at the University of Florida, 1962-1972,” which appeared in this issue. It concerns the racial integration of UF in the 1960s and ’70s.
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Episode 07: Fall 2010
14/04/2014We interviewed the three authors that contributed to this special issue, all of whom are graduate students finishing their Ph.D.s on Florida history topics. We asked the authors about their experiences researching a Florida topic while early in their scholarly careers. Our guests on this podcast were Deborah L. Bauer, author of “. . . in a strange place”: The Experiences of British Women during the Colonization of East & West Florida,” Nicole C. Cox, author of “Selling Seduction: Women and Feminine Nature in 1920s Florida,” and Peter Ferdinando, author of “A Translation History of Florida.”
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Episode 06: Summer 2010
14/04/2014We interviewed Gilbert C. Din, Professor Emeritus at Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colorado. He is the author of several books on colonial Louisiana and a frequent contributor to the FHQ. We interviewed him about his work on William August Bowles and about his article that appeared in this issue, titled “William August Bowles on the Gulf Coast, 1787-1803: Unraveling a Labyrinthine Conundrum.”
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Episode 05: Spring 2010
14/04/2014We interviewed Derrick E. White, Assistant Professor of History at Florida Atlantic University. He wrote an article that appeared in this issue, titled “From Desegregation to Integration: Race, Football, and "Dixie" at the University of Florida.” It is about Confederate memory and racial integration at Florida universities during the 1960s.
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Episode 04: Winter 2010
14/04/2014We interviewed Daniel Feller, Professor of History and Editor/Director of The Papers of Andrew Jackson. He gave the 2009 Catherine Prescott Lecture for the Florida Historical Society, which became an article in this issue. It is titled “The Seminole Controversy Revisited: A New Look At Andrew Jackson's 1818 Florida Campaign.”
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Episode 03: Fall 2009
14/04/2014We interviewed Nancy J. Levine, Associate Professor of English at the University of North Florida. Professor Levine and her class recorded the history of the Hasting Library, a collaborative effort that is chronicled in an article in this issue, titled “Florida Classroom: Tea Sets, Tractors and T-1 Lines: The Survival of a Small Town Library: The Hastings Branch Library, Hastings, Florida.”
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Episode 02: Summer 2009
14/04/2014For this podcast, we interviewed Dr. Michael Bowen, assistant director at the Bob Graham center for Public Service, about his article “The Strange Tale of Wesley and Florence Garrison: Racial Crosscurrents of the Postwar Florida Republican Party,” and the research involved in writing that article. The article appeared in this issue.
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Episode 01: Spring 2009
15/04/2009This podcast features an interview with Professor Jack E. Davis. He is the author of An Everglades Providence: Marjory Stoneman Douglas and the American Environmental Century, published by the University of Georgia Press. In this podcast, he discusses his article “Sharp Prose for Green: John D. MacDonald and the First Ecological Novel,” which appeared in this issue.