1919: The Year of the Crack-Up
History
Washington State's Matthew Avery Sutton tells the story of a Minneapolis pastor named William Belly Riley and the rise of Christian fundamentalism in the post-World War I years. From concerns about FDR and the New Deal to the Trump administration's anti-Obamacare rhetoric--and a consistently "apocalyptic worldview"--Sutton and historian Ted Widmer trace the influence of this movement over the past century.
The Birth of the Modern Middle East, with Ted Widmer
Dwight Eisenhower & the Road Trip that Changed America, with Brian C. Black
How General Motors Shaped America, with Anna Clark
The 1919 Elaine Massacre & the Struggle to Remember, with Nan Woodruff
The 1919 Race Riots & the Crucible of Chicago, with Adam Green
Eugene Debs & the Origins of Socialism in the U.S., with Maurice Isserman
A Hundred Years of Student Protests in China, with Jeffrey Wasserstrom
The Amritsar Massacre & India's Independence Movement, with Gyan Prakash
Winston Churchill & the Geopolitics of 1919, with Andrew Roberts
Egypt & the Wilsonian Moment, with Erez Manela
1919 & the Birth of Modern Korea, with Kyung Moon Hwang
Jazz Arrives, Loudly, in 1919, with David Sager
The Early Days of Hollywood, with David Bordwell
Ireland's Quest for Self-Determination, with Christopher L. Pastore
Prohibition, Immigration, & the Klan, with Lisa McGirr
1919 & the Modern World, with Ted Widmer
Teddy Roosevelt's Complicated Legacy, with Patty O'Toole
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