(Lucy) How did Ivanhoe become a wildly popular school text? And what happened to the interpretation of the text when it did? Across the Anglophone world, Scott’s medieval England became reified as a time and place of chivalric adventure, despite the novel’s often ironic tone and often pointed social criticisms. This episode examines how Sir Walter Scott’s imagined past became something very different as it was reinterpreted in popular culture, in sometimes sinister ways.
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Poison in Colonial India
The (Failed) Republic of Fredonia
Tycho Brahe: The Astronomer with a Copper Nose
The Rise of the British Spy Novel
The Murder of Sweden's King Gustav III
The Life of Beatrice de Planissoles
Desert Queens? Women at the Edges of Empire from Hester Stanhope to Gertrude Bell
The Life and Crimes of Caravaggio
Al Capone's Pineapple Primary
Easter Rising, Part II: Aftermath
Easter Rising, Part I: Origins
Disney and the Space Race
Evelyn Nesbit and the Crime of the Century
The Eleven Lost Days
After Napoleon: Josephine Divorced
Medieval Animal Trials
Sherlock Holmes in Popular Culture
The Great Medieval Canon Law Forgery
The Origins of "I Am A Man"
Apples in America
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