4.9 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 26 May 2024
⏱️ 42 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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Thank You to Brady Gibney for giving me the great idea to replay some of my favorite shows while I am off this week
Today is Memorial Day So I'm re posting my Conversation with my favorite historian
Kenneth C. Davis is the author of Don’t Know Much About® History, which spent 35 consecutive weeks on The New York Times bestseller list, and gave rise to the Don’t Know Much About® series of books and audios, which has a combined in-print total of some 4.7-million copies.
In September 2020, Don’t Know Much About® History: Anniversary Edition was released by HarperCollins. A revised, updated, and expanded edition of the book that started the series thirty years ago, it presents a complete survey of American history, from before the arrival of Columbus in 1492 right through the events of the past decade –from 9/11 through the election of Barack Obama and the first years of his administration. This 30th anniversary edition included a new preface, “From the Era of Broken Trust to the Era of Broken Democracy.”
Davis is also the author of the New York Times bestseller America’s Hidden History: Untold Tales of the First Pilgrims, Fighting Women, and Forgotten Founders Who Shaped a Nation.
In September 2016, his book IN THE SHADOW OF LIBERTY: The Hidden History of Slavery, Four Presidents, and Five Black Lives was published to critical acclaim. In May 2018, MORE DEADLY THAN WAR: The Hidden History of the Spanish Flu and The First World War was published. In October 2020, STRONGMAN: The Rise of Five Dictators and the Fall of Democracy was released. In November 2022, Scribner published Great Short Books: A Year of Reading–Briefly.
For more than 30 years, Kenneth C. Davis has proven that Americans don’t hate history, just the dull version they slept through in class.
But many of them want to know now because their kids are asking them questions they can’t answer. Davis’s approach is to refresh us on the subjects we should have learned in school. He does it by busting myths, setting the record straight, and always remembering that fun is not a four-letter word.
Other points of note:
•Davis has spoken about teaching history to teachers’ groups, such as the National Council for the Social Studies, and state and regional Social Studies conferences in Florida, New York, Maine, Connecticut, Vermont, and Massachusetts.
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Hello everybody. Thank you very much for pressing play on my Memorial Day special and this only happened because of listeners like you obviously support the podcast with a paid subscription but specifically |
0:13.7 | because of our friend Brady and Arkansas who sent me an email saying hey |
0:17.5 | why don't you play some of your best-up some of your favorite conversations |
0:21.0 | during your week off and I thought well the least I can do is play the |
0:25.1 | most obvious one for Memorial Day my conversation with Kenneth C. Davis about the |
0:30.0 | history of Memorial Day and that is what I have for you. I do have a couple of other |
0:33.9 | conversations that you haven't heard coming up this week as well. I'm very much looking forward |
0:38.5 | to sharing those and you can find them here while I'm off. That's right, I'm off. On quote vacation trying to do quote |
0:46.7 | nothing. So far so good. Anyway, don't know much dot com that's Kency Davis's website if you want to go check that out, but he has a very provocative piece up at |
0:56.1 | Don't Know Much.com about Memorial Day, of course, observed here the last Monday of May honoring |
1:02.1 | the men and women who died while serving the U.S. military, |
1:05.0 | but he writes at his blog, let's set the record straight. |
1:08.4 | Memorial Day is about slavery. |
1:09.8 | It's not about swimsuit sales, the start of summer or hot dogs on the Barbie. |
1:13.8 | Barbie, really, Ken? Do we say that? |
1:15.8 | He goes on the same Memorial Day. |
1:17.2 | The most solemn occasion on the national calendar now honors the nation's war dead. |
1:22.2 | But it was born out of the Civil War, which was fought |
1:25.0 | because of slavery, America's original sin. |
1:28.1 | Memorial days about a nation, quote, conceived in liberty, |
1:31.7 | but born in shackles. |
1:33.4 | And in these fraught times when teaching history has become so contentious, |
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