Episodes

  • #16. A Taste of the Past is Food for Thought
    Nov 19 2024

    What’s the backstory to the ingredients and dishes that find their way to your Thanksgiving table? This holiday season, you’re invited to join us in the kitchen for a heaping helping of history because food can be a portal to the past. Cook along with us as we use old recipes from historic cookbooks. We’ll travel back in time and feel a connection to the people of the past and the worlds in which they lived.


    Host: Andrew J. Falk


    Past is Prologue is a humanities podcast that provides the public with the background behind the day's headlines, and offers much-needed context to understand the significance of current events that people observe around them. It seeks to contribute to the public conversation in an engaging, informative, accessible, and constructive way. It's produced by the Department of History in the College of Arts & Humanities at Christopher Newport University in Virginia. We welcome your inquiries and feedback at pastpodcast@cnu.edu.

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    26 mins
  • #15. Election 2024: Harris Makes Her Case to the People
    Oct 29 2024

    In this final installment in our miniseries on the election of 2024, we use history to understand the candidacy of Vice President Kamala Harris and the strategic decisions her presidential campaign has made. Labeled by the Trump campaign as an “extremist” and the “antichrist,” do themes of patriotism and religion affect the way Harris campaigns for the presidency under a banner of “joy and freedom”? A generation younger than Trump, and seeking to become the first woman and woman of color to serve as President of the United States, how do generational, gender, and racial dynamics shape the contest? In other words: In this age of identity politics, how does Kamala Harris make her case to the people?


    Host: Andrew J. Falk

    Guest: Elizabeth Wood


    Past is Prologue is a humanities podcast that provides the public with the background behind the day's headlines, and offers much-needed context to understand the significance of current events that people observe around them. It seeks to contribute to the public conversation in an engaging, informative, accessible, and constructive way. It's produced by the Department of History in the College of Arts & Humanities at Christopher Newport University in Virginia. We welcome your inquiries and feedback at pastpodcast@cnu.edu.

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    38 mins
  • #14. Election 2024: From Battleground to Common Ground
    Oct 16 2024

    This is the second episode in our three-part series on the election of 2024. Today, we’re looking at voters in the battleground states. In a nation of “red” states for Trump and “blue” states for Harris, what are voters thinking in the “purple” bellwether states of the “Rust Belt” and “Sun Belt”? We'll get the historical backstory to shifting political coalitions, economic and racial insecurities, and the selections of J.D. Vance and Tim Walz. If you want to understand why your fellow citizens sometimes view the world so differently from yourself, then maybe this episode is for you. In other words, let’s go to the battleground to find common ground on what matters most to these voters. As always, we’ll ground our discussion in the historical record.


    Host: Andrew J. Falk

    Guest: James Allison, III


    Past is Prologue is a humanities podcast that provides the public with the background behind the day's headlines, and offers much-needed context to understand the significance of current events that people observe around them. It seeks to contribute to the public conversation in an engaging, informative, accessible, and constructive way. It's produced by the Department of History in the College of Arts & Humanities at Christopher Newport University in Virginia. We welcome your inquiries and feedback at pastpodcast@cnu.edu.

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    31 mins
  • #13. Election 2024: Presidents, Pundits, and Political Violence
    Oct 8 2024

    The 2024 presidential election in U.S. history is shaping up to be unlike any others… but is it? An incumbent president with health concerns. A former president seeking to regain the office he lost is the target of an assassination attempt. The biased media sets the narrative and stokes partisan fury. Not only are their historical parallels to these and other facets of the election, but there are historical forces that can help us understand what is going on, why the campaigns are conducted in certain ways, and also tell us something about who we are as American voters.


    Host: Andrew J. Falk

    Guest: Phillip Hamilton


    Past is Prologue is a humanities podcast that provides the public with the background behind the day's headlines, and offers much-needed context to understand the significance of current events that people observe around them. It seeks to contribute to the public conversation in an engaging, informative, accessible, and constructive way. It's produced by the Department of History in the College of Arts & Humanities at Christopher Newport University in Virginia. We welcome your inquiries and feedback at pastpodcast@cnu.edu.

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    34 mins
  • #12. Carrying a Torch for the Paris Olympics
    Aug 1 2024

    Paris is hosting the Summer Olympics and, aside from the athletic competitions, it allows the world to focus attention on the people and culture of Paris. There’s a history to this: The ancient Olympics featured artistic competitions, and the modern Olympics handed out medals to artists in multiple events: music, painting, sculpture, literature, and architecture. What draws us to the great international city of Paris, where athletes compete in the shadows of the Eiffel Tower, Louvre Museum, and Versailles? We’ll put a spotlight on the City of Light to find out what makes Paris so special.


    Host: Andrew J. Falk

    Guests: Michelle Erhardt and Michael Mulryan


    Past is Prologue is a humanities podcast that provides the public with the background behind the day's headlines, and offers much-needed context to understand the significance of current events that people observe around them. It seeks to contribute to the public conversation in an engaging, informative, accessible, and constructive way. It's produced by the Department of History in the College of Arts & Humanities at Christopher Newport University in Virginia. We welcome your inquiries and feedback at pastpodcast@cnu.edu.

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    47 mins
  • #11. Setting the Olympic Record Straight
    Jul 22 2024

    The Summer Olympics are here once again – a spectacular two weeks of athletic competition filled with tradition, including the passing of the torch, the parade of nations, medal ceremonies, and national anthems. But how traditional is it? Athletes in ancient Greece didn’t compete in togas and tunics; in fact, they didn’t compete in clothing at all! They raced chariots, avoided getting beaten by sticks, accepted awards of olive oil, and erected statues to their glory as well as their shame. Clearly, there’s a lot to learn and this episode strives to set the Olympic record straight.


    Host: Andrew J. Falk

    Guest: David Pollio


    Past is Prologue is a humanities podcast that provides the public with the background behind the day's headlines, and offers much-needed context to understand the significance of current events that people observe around them. It seeks to contribute to the public conversation in an engaging, informative, accessible, and constructive way. It's produced by the Department of History in the College of Arts & Humanities at Christopher Newport University in Virginia. We welcome your inquiries and feedback at pastpodcast@cnu.edu.

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    48 mins
  • Coming Soon!
    Jul 1 2024

    You can listen here for a glimpse into the future of the past: the topics of our brand new summer episodes. Thanks for listening, subscribing, rating, and recommending to others!


    Past is Prologue is a history podcast that provides the public with the background behind the day's headlines, and offers much-needed context to understand the significance of current events that people observe around them. It seeks to contribute to the public conversation in an engaging, informative, accessible, and constructive way. It's produced by the Department of History in the College of Arts & Humanities at Christopher Newport University in Virginia. We welcome your inquiries and feedback at pastpodcast@cnu.edu.

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    2 mins
  • #10. Founding Families of the American Revolution
    Jun 14 2024

    During the “patriotic season” – Memorial Day, Flag Day, and July 4th – families come together to commemorate the nation, especially our hard-fought independence during the American Revolution. But the complex political events between “Mother England” and her American “daughter” also provide the backdrop to the family dramas that affected many Americans, including the “father of the country” George Washington and Alexander Hamilton, Benjamin and William Franklin, John and Abigail Adams, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, Henry and Lucy Knox, among many others. In many ways, family is very much a part of the history of the holidays.


    Host: Andrew J. Falk

    Guest: Phillip Hamilton


    Past is Prologue is a humanities podcast that provides the public with the background behind the day's headlines, and offers much-needed context to understand the significance of current events that people observe around them. It seeks to contribute to the public conversation in an engaging, informative, accessible, and constructive way. It's produced by the Department of History in the College of Arts & Humanities at Christopher Newport University in Virginia. We welcome your inquiries and feedback at pastpodcast@cnu.edu.

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    42 mins