(Lucy and Rachel) In the often-chaotic society of sixteenth-century England, many people enthusiastically consumed true crime narratives in songs, news, and theater plays. Then as now, true crime narratives often centered on community crime-solving as a way of dealing with sensational and upsetting violence. Whether in the form of domestic tragedies or elaborate revenge dramas, true crime played to packed houses in the theaters of Elizabethan London. Amid religious and political upheaval, the popularity of true crime attested not just to evolving habits of media consumption, but also to powerful desires for communal order and mutual responsibility. In this episode, Lucy and guest host Dr. Rachel Clark examine true love, strong hate, and swift revenge – and why audiences tend to love a good murder.
The Ottoman Kafes or the Princely Cage
Mohenjo Daro: Living City, Mound of the Dead
The History of Tikka Masala
Moe Berg, Baseball's Scholar and Spy
Christopher Columbus and the Book of Prophecies
Stede Bonnet, the Gentlemen Pirate
Empress, Strategist… Saint? Irene of Byzantium
Florida: Frontier and Cracker History
Anne Neville and the Wars of the Roses
Divorcing in Revolutionary France
The Martyrs of Thana
The Forme of Cury
From Hwaet to the Ring Shout: Lorenzo Dow Turner
The Origins of American Eugenics
Hurrem Sultan: the Woman Who Changed Ottoman Queenship
Marie Louise, Napoleon's Second Empress
Milicent Patrick and the Creature
History for Halloween VII
Surviving the Plague in 1665
William Miller and the Great Disappointment
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Irish Songs with Ken Murray
History Obscura
Historycal: Words that Shaped the World
The Rest Is History
Lore