
Insights from recent episode analysis
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Insights are generated by CastFox AI using publicly available data, episode content, and proprietary models.
Total monthly reach
Estimated from 3 chart positions in 3 markets.
By chart position
- 🇨🇦CA · Courses#1665K to 30K
- 🇰🇷KR · Courses#9210K to 30K
- 🇹🇷TR · Courses#109500 to 3K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
11K to 44K🎙 Biweekly cadence·54 episodes·Long inactive - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
16K to 63K🇨🇦48%🇰🇷48%🇹🇷5% - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
4.7K to 19K
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Recent episodes
Why Humanities Courses Are in Distress: A Modest Proposal for a Remedy
Mar 10, 2020
Unknown duration
Why Did Elizabethans and Jacobeans Read Shakespeare’s Plays?
Mar 2, 2020
Unknown duration
Imperial Recessional: Sir William Luce and the Creation of the United Arab Emirates
Feb 25, 2020
Unknown duration
Philip Goad (Harvard) on British and American architecture
Feb 17, 2020
Unknown duration
The London Review of Books
Feb 11, 2020
Unknown duration
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3/10/20 | ![]() Why Humanities Courses Are in Distress: A Modest Proposal for a Remedy | Paula Marantz Cohen DREXEL UNIVERSITY How can decline in enrollments in the humanities be explained? Nationwide in recent years estimates of the drop in liberal arts majors range from one-fourth to one-third of those in English, history, government, philosophy and other traditional subjects. English departments have been hit especially hard. One study found that faculty members seem to […] | — | ||||||
| 3/2/20 | ![]() Why Did Elizabethans and Jacobeans Read Shakespeare’s Plays? | Aaron Pratt HARRY RANSOM CENTER Before the publication of Shakespeare’s First Folio in 1623 and the efforts of subsequent editors and critics, England’s printed playbooks were considered “riff raff,” connected more with the world of London’s popular theaters than with what we might think of as “capital-L” Literature. Or so we have been told. This […] | — | ||||||
| 2/25/20 | ![]() Imperial Recessional: Sir William Luce and the Creation of the United Arab Emirates | Tancred Bradshaw LONDON One of the surprises of Britain’s withdrawal from the Middle East was the successful creation of the United Arab Emirates in 1971. Tancred Bradshaw will discuss the critical role played by Sir William Luce, previously Governor and Commander-in-Chief of the Aden Colony, in that transition. Luce was responsible for establishing a viable […] | — | ||||||
| 2/17/20 | ![]() Philip Goad (Harvard) on British and American architecture | Philip Goad is the Gough Whitlam and Malcolm Fraser Visiting Professor of Australian Studies (AY2019-20) at Harvard University and Chair of Architecture and Redmond Barry Distinguished Professor at the University of Melbourne. He was trained as an architect and gained his PhD in architectural history at the University of Melbourne where he has taught since […] | — | ||||||
| 2/11/20 | ![]() The London Review of Books | The London Review of Books was founded in 1979 during a strike at The Times that prevented the publication of the Times Literary Supplement. By the time the dispute at The Times was settled, two issues of the LRB had been published. At the beginning there was only a small circulation. A large proportion of […] | — | ||||||
| 2/4/20 | ![]() How George Washington Defeated the British Empire | Thomas Ricks NEW YORK TIMES   If the best measure of a general is the ability to grasp the nature of the war he faces, and then to make adjustments, George Washington was one of the greatest the United States ever had. This is not perceived even today because he had few victories during the […] | — | ||||||
| 1/27/20 | ![]() P. G. Wodehouse and Politics: What Did He Know, and When Did He Know It? | Speaker – David Leal, Nuffield College, Oxford P.G. Wodehouse was England’s greatest comic writer. His new memorial at Westminster Abbey celebrates his achievements as “Humorist, Novelist, Playwright, Lyricist.” He continues to be widely read and written about. Wodehouse is best known for creating sunny fictional worlds into which we can escape, yet he found himself […] | — | ||||||
| 11/12/19 | ![]() Churchill’s Most Difficult Decisions | Speaker – Allen Packwood, Churchill College, Cambridge Allen Packwood will use his knowledge of the Churchill Papers, held at Churchill College, Cambridge, to analyze the contents of Churchill’s despatch boxes. He will go behind the iconic image and the famous oratory to look in detail at Churchill’s leadership and shed light on how the Prime […] | — | ||||||
| 11/6/19 | ![]() ‘When I feel very near to God, I always feel such a need to undress’: Religion, Nakedness and the Body Divine | Speaker – Philippa Levine Diverse institutions have attempted to order and to organize, to regulate and to banish, to promote and to sell nakedness. Focusing on religion’s always ambivalent relationship with the human body, this talk explores a cultural history with surprisingly powerful contemporary resonance. Philippa Levine holds the Walter Prescott Webb Chair in History […] | — | ||||||
| 10/28/19 | ![]() Jane Austen’s Lost Books | Speaker – Janine Barchas In the nineteenth century, inexpensive editions of Jane Austen’s novels were made available to Britain’s working classes. They were sold at railway stations, traded for soap wrappers, and awarded as school prizes. At pennies a copy, these reprints were some of the earliest mass-market paperbacks, with Austen’s stories squeezed into tight […] | — | ||||||
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| 10/22/19 | ![]() Facts, Censorship, and Spin: Covering the Pacific War from Australia, 1942 | Speaker – Michael J. Birkner, Gettysburg College This lecture is about journalists based in Australia practicing their craft in 1942, when the prospect of a Japanese invasion was impending. How did professional standards compare with daily practice? Most information came from official sources, and draft articles had to run the gantlet of military censors. What […] | — | ||||||
| 10/14/19 | ![]() Political Leadership in Macbeth and Coriolanus | Speaker – Gwyn Daniel OXFORD In many of his plays, Shakespeare deals with profound political questions that have continuing relevance for the contemporary world. His tragedies often have a family drama at their heart. They include conflicts between personal and family loyalties, on the one hand, and on the other the demands of realpolitik. In […] | — | ||||||
| 9/30/19 | ![]() The Novels of Benjamin Disraeli and Oscar Wilde | Speaker – Sandra Mayer Oscar Wilde once described Benjamin Disraeli’s life as ‘the most brilliant of paradoxes’. It served as a model for someone who, as an Irishman and aspiring literary celebrity, shared Disraeli’s outsider status, his Byronic dandyism, his mastery of the quotable epigram, and his quest for fame in the British establishment. This […] | — | ||||||
| 9/23/19 | ![]() The Cultural Identity of American Libraries | Speaker – Ellen Cunningham-Kruppa Since 1981, conservators who work in libraries and archives to preserve cultural records have been educated typically in three-to four-year graduate programs. Before 1981 in the U.S., however, no higher education opportunities existed—neither undergraduate nor graduate—targeted to the field of library and archives conservation. Why was this case? Ellen Cunningham-Kruppa locates […] | — | ||||||
| 9/16/19 | ![]() Carnival in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night | Speaker – Wayne A. Rebhorn Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night has long been associated with the festive aspects of carnival, especially in its rejection of authority and the exploration of gender confusion in its main, romantic plot. But ‘carnival’ as used by Shakespeare also meant a time of grotesque liberation and indulgence. The carnivalesque can be disturbing as well […] | — | ||||||
| 9/9/19 | ![]() C. P. Snow and the Two Cultures of Medicine and the Humanities | Speaker – Stephen Sonnenberg While a student at Princeton in the late 1950s and early 1960s Stephen Sonnenberg was influenced by the ideas of the literary critic and poet R. P. Blackmur, and read C. P. Snow’s The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution (1959). He will explain Snow’s influence on his thinking throughout his life, as […] | — | ||||||
| 9/4/19 | ![]() Walter Scott, the Stuarts, and Stewardship | Speaker – Sam Baker Often described as the inventor of the historical novel, the Scottish author Walter Scott (1771-1832) was also a poet, lawyer, pioneering editor, and popular historian. This talk will explore the theme of stewardship in Scott’s fiction—with particular reference to his best remembered work, Ivanhoe, and one of his least remembered, The […] | — | ||||||
| 5/28/19 | ![]() Book Launch: 150 Highly Recommended Books | Speaker – Dean Robert King This occasion celebrates the end of the five-year process, sponsored by Randy Diehl and the College of Liberal Arts, that resulted in 150 Highly Recommended Books. The other committee members for the project were Robert Abzug (Rapoport Chair of Jewish Studies), Roger Louis (Kerr Professor of English History and Culture), […] | — | ||||||
| 5/28/19 | ![]() Fake News, Alternative Facts, and the Question of Truth | Speaker – David Edwards (GOVERNMENT) David Edwards has been a dedicated reader of American and British newspapers and opinion magazines since the 1950s. In fact, he still subscribes to more than one hundred print editions of newspapers, magazines, and journals. He will talk about how fake news has evolved into the versions of it that […] | — | ||||||
| 5/28/19 | ![]() Biographies: Research, Writing, and Reviews | Speakers – Bill Brands (HISTORY) Bat Sparrow (GOVERNMENT) Ellen Cunningham-Kruppa (HARRY RANSOM CENTER) Bill Brands and Bat Sparrow will discuss the difference between writing history and biography, and between writing the life of a living person and that of someone dead, perhaps long ago dead, as well as the attitudes of biographers toward their subjects. […] | — | ||||||
| 5/28/19 | ![]() After Empire: Britain, the United States, and the Iranian Revolution | Speaker – Mark Gasiorowski This lecture will begin with the historic Britain-Iran connection: ‘If you lift up Khomeini’s beard, you will find “MADE IN BRITAIN” stamped on his chin.’ After Iran’s 1978-1979 revolution, US and British officials sought a cooperative, mutually-beneficial relationship with the country’s new leaders. Contrary to what many believed, the CIA did […] | — | ||||||
| 5/28/19 | ![]() Countess Noël, Heroine of the Titanic | Speaker – Joanna Hitchcock Among the 1,300 passengers aboard the Titanic when she steamed out of Southampton Harbor in April 1912 was Noël, Countess of Rothes. She was traveling to the States to join her husband. This account of Noël’s experiences on the ship, in the lifeboat, and aboard the rescue ship is told through […] | — | ||||||
| 5/28/19 | ![]() A UT Ethics Center? The Oxford Ethics Centre in Comparison – Round Table Discussion | Speakers – Virginia Brown (Dell Medical School), Robert Prentice (McCombs Business School) Stephen Sonnenberg, M.D. (Plan II), Paul Woodruff (Philosophy) The Oxford Ethics Centre was established in 2003 with the aim of rational reflection on personal and professional ethics: ‘The vision is Socratic, not missionary’. The Oxford Centre promotes discussion on ‘climate change, terrorism, global […] | — | ||||||
| 5/28/19 | ![]() How the British Left Palestine | Speaker – Bernard Wasserstein At the end of its three-decades-long mandate in 1948, Britain withdrew its administration and 100,000-strong armed forces from Palestine. But unlike its departure from any other dependent territory, it did not hand over to any successor government. Instead it left Arabs and Jews to fight for possession of the Holy Land. […] | — | ||||||
| 5/28/19 | ![]() Worldwide Consequences of American Expansion in 1898 | Speaker – Karl Rove Karl Rove’s recent book, The Triumph of William McKinley, deals with the election of 1896 and its consequences. His lecture will expand on the results of the 1898 war with Spain: the annexation of the Philippines and Hawaii in the Pacific and Puerto Rico in the Caribbean as well as Cuba […] | — | ||||||
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Chart Positions
3 placements across 3 markets.
Chart Positions
3 placements across 3 markets.
