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
Federal Penitentiary
Grave Robbing (Interview w/ Liz Clappin)
Listener Q&A - Vol. 2
Overalls
Women's Suffrage
Movie Censor
Ashley Ordinance
Candler Mansions
Epidemics - Part III
Eugenics
Georgia Institute of Technology
Bonus Mini: 1897 Fulton Bag Strike
Epidemics - Part II
Dr. Roderick Badger
Macedonia/Bagley Park
Inman Park - Part II
Inman Park - Part I
Interracial Marriage
Listener Q&A
International Cotton Exposition
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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