(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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Edward Gibbon Wakefield, Part I: The Abduction
Reformation Propaganda
Living Memory: The Fall of the Berlin Wall
Cheating on Jesus: Bigamy in the Medieval Catholic Priesthood
The Only Running Footman
The Many Reformations of 16th-Century Europe
Queer Women in the Golden Age of Mysteries
Criminalizing Sex in Early Modern England
Medieval Gift Elephants
Hernán Cortés and the Conquest of Mexico
The Strategic Failure of the Habsburg Chin
Popular Protest in Late Antique Ravenna
Confucius and Jesus: The Jesuit Mission to China
Napoleon, Part II: Life in Napoleonic Society
The Origin of the Marathon: Linking Past to Present
The Mau Mau Insurgency
Mozart's Zombie, the Runaway Priest, and the Emperor's Opera
Emperor Akbar, the Mughal Empire, and Divine Faith
Special Edition: Royal Baby Names
Napoleon, Part I: The Man
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