This week, I get to talk about my favorite thing in the whole world - books. Well, technically it’s about where we keep books...but it’s also a story of gender, power, race and access to information. Before the age of technology and the internet, books represented knowledge, and knowledge is power. Keeping that power away from people has been a tool used by the ruling party since the dawn of time. Libraries are a physical link to that power struggle and help us tell the story.
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Carnegie Library Atlanta: http://www.loc.gov/pictures/search/?q=Photograph:%20ga0119&fi=number&op=PHRASE&va=exact&co%20=hh&st=gallery&sg%20=%20true
Atlanta University Carnegie Library: https://hbcudigitallibrary.auctr.edu/digital/collection/rwwl/id/88
White Primary (Mini)
Washerwomen Strike - REPLAY
Bicycle Messengers (Mini)
“Loserville” (Interview w/ Clayton Trutor)
Ida Elliott (Mini)
Abortion
Fernbank Forest (Mini)
Grove Park
Nancy Hanks Train (Mini)
Bicycles - REPLAY
Jitneys (Mini)
Oral History (Katherine Geffcken)
Moving Day (Mini) + Podcast Update
Amusement Parks
Peyton Wall
Grave Robbing - REPLAY
Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport
Orphanages
Fannie Springer
”Miss Atlanta”
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It is Free
Irish Songs with Ken Murray
History Obscura
Historycal: Words that Shaped the World
The Rest Is History
Everything Everywhere Daily