Heartland History
Podcast tekijän mukaan Midwestern History Association

Kategoriat:
73 Jaksot
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Willa Hammit Brown - Gentlemen of the Woods: Manhood, Myth, and the American Lumberjack
Julkaistiin: 21.4.2025 -
Josh Nygren - The State of Conservation: Rural America and the Conservation-Industrial Complex since 1920
Julkaistiin: 4.3.2025 -
Stephanie Ternullo - How the Heartland Went Red
Julkaistiin: 27.1.2025 -
Reflections on Midwestern History
Julkaistiin: 4.12.2024 -
Paul Renfro - The Life and Death of Ryan White: AIDS and Inequality in America
Julkaistiin: 31.10.2024 -
Dr. Casey Huegel - Cleaning Up The Bomb Factory
Julkaistiin: 11.9.2024 -
Dr. Sergio Gonzalez - Strangers No Longer: Latino Belonging and Faith in Twentieth-Century Wisconsin
Julkaistiin: 23.4.2024 -
When a Dream Dies - Pamela Riney-Kehrberg
Julkaistiin: 13.3.2024 -
Josiah Rector - Toxic Debt: An Environmental Justice History of Detroit
Julkaistiin: 22.2.2024 -
Steven Conn - Lies of the Land
Julkaistiin: 24.1.2024 -
Max Fraser - Hillbilly Highway
Julkaistiin: 4.12.2023 -
Crystal Marie Moten - Continually Working
Julkaistiin: 8.11.2023 -
John Nelson - Muddy Ground: Native Peoples, Chicago's Portage, and the Transformation of a Continent
Julkaistiin: 16.10.2023 -
Melissa Ford - A Brick and a Bible
Julkaistiin: 5.9.2023 -
Ashley Howard - What to the "Other" is the Midwest?
Julkaistiin: 30.5.2023 -
The Good Country with Jon Lauck
Julkaistiin: 10.5.2023 -
Dr. Alonzo Ward and African American Hybrid Labor Activism
Julkaistiin: 27.4.2023 -
Steven Moore - The Distance from Slaughter County
Julkaistiin: 29.3.2023 -
Dr. Christopher Ali - Farm Fresh Broadband
Julkaistiin: 6.3.2023 -
Dr. Fernandez-Jones, MexiRican Placemaking in Grand Rapids, Michigan
Julkaistiin: 12.12.2022
A scholarly association devoted to Midwestern history The Midwestern History Association, created in the fall of 2014, is dedicated to rebuilding the field of Midwestern history, which has suffered from decades of neglect and inattention. The MHA will advocate for greater attention to Midwestern history among professional historians, seek to rebuild the infrastructure necessary for the study of the American Midwest, promote greater academic discourse relating to Midwestern history, support the work of the new journal Middle West Review and other journals which promote the study of the Midwest, and offer prizes to scholars who excel in the study of the Midwest.