The Rogue Historian
A podcast hosted by Keith Harris, a historian in 19th-century America, featuring "no scripts, no academic nitwittery - just some really smart people discussing topics in US history: political, social, cultural, and economic."
A podcast hosted by Keith Harris, a historian in 19th-century America, featuring "no scripts, no academic nitwittery - just some really smart people discussing topics in US history: political, social, cultural, and economic."
Talking Machines is a podcast about the world of machine learning. Producer Katherine Gorman and Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences Associate Ryan Adams speak with experts in the field about the latest research. Talking Machines is an independent production of Tote Bag Productions.
Press Publish is a weekly conversation with journalists, technologists, and entrepreneurs about the future of news. Produced by the Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard and hosted by Neiman Lab director Joshua Benton.
A history podcast hosted by Philip Perrin and Ros Evans. In this show, the UK historians explore different towns, cities, or locations by walking through them and sharing the points of interest, history, and culture of the location. The website also includes maps and photos from the walks.
The Harvard Kennedy School PolicyCast is an ongoing conversation on public policy, governance, and global issues featuring weekly 15-20 minute discussions hosted by Matt Cadwallader with prominent thought leaders, researchers, and decision makers.
Cold Call distills the Harvard Business School’s legendary case studies into podcast form. Hosted by Brian Kenny, the podcast airs every two weeks and features HBS faculty discussing cases they’ve written and the lessons they impart.
Harvard Medical School scientists tackle a variety of important questions, ranging from how your neurons work to which genes play a role in particular diseases. This podcast provides context and highlights the latest trends in medical education and biomedical research through interviews and analysis.
The Harvard EdCast is a weekly series of podcasts from the Harvard Graduate School of Education that features 15-20 minute conversations with thought leaders in the field of education from across the country and around the world. Hosted by Matt Weber, the Harvard EdCast is a space for educational discourse and openness, focusing on the myriad issues and current events related to the field.
Researchers at the Hansjorg Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University use nature’s design principles to develop bio-inspired materials and devices that may transform medicine and create a more sustainable world. In this podcast series, Terrence McNally speaks with institute researchers, exploring what motivates them and how they envision the future as it faces disruptive technologies.
The Lonely Palette is a bi-weekly podcast that aims to return art history to the masses, one painting at a time. Based out of - but not affiliated with - the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Tamar picks a painting du jour, interviews unsuspecting passers-by, and then dives deep into the object, the movement, the social context, and anything and everything else that will make it as exciting to you as it is to her.
You Must Remember This is a storytelling podcast about the secret and/or forgotten histories of Hollywood’s first century. Created, hosted and produced by Karina Longworth and distributed by Panopy by Slate Magazine.
Culinary historian Linda Pelacchio discusses food history with academic historians, cookbook authors, and chefs. This long-running weekly podcast has over 200 back episodes to enjoy as well as new weekly content. Hosted by Heritage Radio in Brooklyn, NY.
The best interviews are more recent (2014 on) and feature serious food historians who have generally published books on the subject being discussed.
From the Southern Oral History Program, this podcast showcases the richness of our archive of nearly 6,000 interviews with people from across the South. We discuss the interpretive, ethical, pedagogical, and technological complexities of learning history by interviewing people who lived it. Recent episodes have covered LGBTQ life in the South; feminism; segregation in the rural south; how to handle and interpret silences; emotion; and what to do when pets interrupt your interview! Subscribe on iTunes so you don't miss next month's episode.
A weely podcast about the local and international history of Westenr New York created and produced by seven #historybuffs based in Buffalo, NY: Tommy Buttaccio, Averill Earls, Elizabeth Garner Masarik, Sarah Handley-Cousins, Marissa C. Rhodes, Katie Smyser, and Dan Wallace. They interview junior and established scholars about their works in progress.