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Showing episodes and shows of
Paul Jaskot
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Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers hosted by Mark Stevens
Announcing the Title and Authors for the 2024 RMFW Short Story Anthology Mar 03, 2024
Linda (L.V.) Ditchkus has written her whole life. But until eight years ago, her writing was either technical, scholarly, or in travel magazines. In 2015, she jumped into novel writing with both feet. After drafting her first chapter, which only amounted to a few hundred words, she realized she had plenty to learn. So she found a network of writing friends—many through RMFW—who gave her writing tips and pointed her toward writing resources like how-to books and classes. She’s grateful for her fantastic writing pals. Being a judge for the 2022 Self Published Science Fiction Competition and a 2023 youth...
2025-07-28
45 min
Forbidden History
Building the Nazi War Machine
In this episode of the Forbidden History podcast we take a look at the dark ambitions of Hans Kammler, whose fingerprints remain on some of the Nazi regime’s most lethal projects, from the development of the V-2 rocket to the construction and operation of concentration camps. Cast List:Nigel Jones: Author & HistorianDr Michael Allen: Author, ‘The Business of Genocide’Dr. Paul Jaskot: Author, ‘The Architecture of Oppression’Dr. Karina Urbach: Author, ‘Go-Betweens for Hitler’Guy Walters: Author & Historian Dr. Katherine S...
2025-04-22
38 min
Forbidden History
Fritz Todt: The Man Who Built Germany’s Roads and War Machine
Fritz Todt was responsible for overseeing major engineering projects such as the autobahn, the West Wall defenses, and more. But in 1942, he died under mysterious circumstances…Cast List:Jadwiga Korowaj: Local Guide, in collaboration with Wolf’s Lair MuseumNigel Jones: Author and HistorianGuy Walters: Author and Historian Dr. Christian Packheiser: Leibniz Institute for Contemporary HistoryJohn Guse: Author, ‘Plassenburg Spirit: Nazi Technology’Dr. Paul Jaskot: Author, ‘The Architecture of Oppression’Shalina Patel: HistorianVincent Schmitt: Location Guide, in col...
2025-03-27
40 min
The Holocaust History Podcast
Ep. 46- Nazi Architecture with Paul Jaskot
Send us a textArchitecture (and architects) played a critical role in not just the Third Reich, but also the Holocaust. Nazi architects helped embody the Nazi worldview in their monumental work but also in the designs of concentration camps. They were willing collaborators in the use of slave labor and, ultimately, in the construction of the apparatuses of genocide. In this episode, I talk with architecture and Holocaust historian Paul Jaskot about all these facets of architecture in the Third Reich. Paul Jaskot is Professor of Art, Art History, and Visual Studies and...
2025-03-03
1h 15
The Holocaust History Podcast
Ep. 43- Geographies of the Holocaust with Anne Kelly Knowles and Tim Cole
Send us a textUltimately, the story of the Holocaust is one centered in places: where something happened, where someone was from, where someone wanted to go. In this episode, I talked with two scholars about the role of geography in the Holocaust but also about how we use geographical approaches and methodologies to ask (and answer new important historical questions. Anne Kelly Knowles is the McBride Professor of History at the University of Maine. Tim Cole is a professor of social history at the University of Bristol.
2025-01-27
1h 21
In the Foreground: Conversations on Art & Writing
“An Outward-Looking Model”: The Future(s) of the University and Higher Education in a Digital Age with Koenraad Brosens and Blake Stimson
In this episode, guest interviewer Anne Helmreich (The Getty Foundation) speaks with Koenraad Brosens, professor of art history at the University of Leuven in Belgium, and Blake Stimson, professor of art history at the University of Illinois Chicago, about the future of universities in a digital age. They discuss the benefits and challenges of teaching at public institutions, the concept of “the third generation university,” and potential pitfalls to the vogue for interdisciplinarity. Reflecting particularly on the past two years of the pandemic, Koenraad and Blake share how they are navigating the newly digi...
2022-04-12
57 min
In the Foreground: Conversations on Art & Writing
“What are Our Important Questions?”: Collaboration and Interdisciplinarity in a Digital Age with Jacqueline Francis and Susan Elizabeth Gagliardi
In this episode, guest interviewer Paul B. Jaskot (Duke University) speaks with Jacqueline Francis, a scholar of contemporary art and chair of the Graduate Visual and Critical Studies Program at the California College of the Arts, and Susan Elizabeth Gagliardi, a specialist of the arts of Africa and associate professor of art history at Emory University, on the topic of collaboration and interdisciplinary in art history and digital humanities. They articulate a shared experience of “falling into” collaborative, digital practices out of necessity, led by the kinds of questions they wanted to answer. Thro...
2022-04-05
56 min
The Machinist
“Distance and Criticality”: The Digital Humanities and the Potential for Art History Scholarship with Hubertus Kohle and Emily Pugh
Podcast: In the Foreground: Conversations on Art & Writing (LS 27 · TOP 10% what is this?)Episode: “Distance and Criticality”: The Digital Humanities and the Potential for Art History Scholarship with Hubertus Kohle and Emily PughPub date: 2022-03-22Get Podcast Transcript →powered by Listen411 - fast audio-to-text and summarizationPaul B. Jaskot (Duke University) speaks with Hubertus Kohle (professor of art history at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich in Germany) and Emily Pugh (an art historian and the Digital Humanities Specialist for The Getty Research Institu...
2022-03-30
1h 02
In the Foreground: Conversations on Art & Writing
“To Make Visible the Structures”: Challenging the Canon, Digital and Beyond, with Niall Atkinson and Min Kyung Lee
In this episode, guest interviewer Anne Helmreich (Getty Foundation) speaks with Niall Atkinson, associate professor of art history at the University of Chicago, and Min Kyung Lee, assistant professor of Growth and Structure of Cities at Bryn Mawr College, to reflect on the canon of art history. They discuss how the canon as a narrative offers a shared framework for discussion, analysis, and exchange, but problems arise when the canon becomes fixed or an imposition. Niall and Min describe how they approach using archives in more varied ways, to capture “different voices,” and they...
2022-03-29
1h 03
The Machinist
“Directed Towards How We See Ourselves”: Social Art History in a Digital World with Paul B. Jaskot and Barbara McCloskey
Podcast: In the Foreground: Conversations on Art & Writing (LS 27 · TOP 10% what is this?)Episode: “Directed Towards How We See Ourselves”: Social Art History in a Digital World with Paul B. Jaskot and Barbara McCloskeyPub date: 2022-03-15Get Podcast Transcript →powered by Listen411 - fast audio-to-text and summarization This fourth season of In the Foreground is a special series of five roundtable conversations dedicated to “the Grand Challenges” – a phrase frequently adopted in the sciences to refer to the great unanswered questions that represent promising frontiers – of bringing together digital and comp...
2022-03-23
1h 06
In the Foreground: Conversations on Art & Writing
“Distance and Criticality”: The Digital Humanities and the Potential for Art History Scholarship with Hubertus Kohle and Emily Pugh
Paul B. Jaskot (Duke University) speaks with Hubertus Kohle (professor of art history at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich in Germany) and Emily Pugh (an art historian and the Digital Humanities Specialist for The Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles) on the relation between the digital humanities and the potential for art history. They reflect on how we work as scholars in terms of accessing and documenting archives and data, and the difference in scale between transferable computational methods as opposed to project-specific solutions. Both guests discuss how engagement with the digital might...
2022-03-22
1h 02
In the Foreground: Conversations on Art & Writing
“Directed Towards How We See Ourselves”: Social Art History in a Digital World with Paul B. Jaskot and Barbara McCloskey
This fourth season of In the Foreground is a special series of five roundtable conversations dedicated to “the Grand Challenges” – a phrase frequently adopted in the sciences to refer to the great unanswered questions that represent promising frontiers – of bringing together digital and computational methods and the social history of art. This series grows out of a colloquium on this topic convened by Anne Helmreich (Associate Director of the Getty Foundation) and Paul B. Jaskot (Professor of Art History at Duke University) at the Clark’s Research and Academic Program in April 2019. Anne and Paul serve as th...
2022-03-15
1h 06
L’Histoire nous le dira
405 000 places dans le Stade Nazi qui n’a jamais été | L’Histoire nous le dira #134
Le Deutsches stadion ou Stade allemand aurait été le plus grand stade du monde. Commencé en 1937 à Nuremberg selon les plans de l’architecte nazi Albert Speer, il devait accueillir 405 000 personnes ! Le but d’Hitler ? Y tenir les jeux aryens, qui auraient remplacé les Jeux olympiques et qui se seraient déroulés à chaque année dans ce stade. Ce projet pharaonique a été stoppé durant la Deuxième guerre mondiale, au moment où l’Allemagne s’enlise et se dirige vers une défaite. Adhérez à cette chaîne pour obtenir des avantages : https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCN4TCCaX-gqBNkrUq...
2021-02-12
13 min
Lead with Empower Podcast
Calvin Joustra, Chris Fox, and Paul Cappadona Lead with Empower
We have a very special episode this week as we catch up with the Operations Managers at our Empower Adventure Park locations in Oldsmar, FL., Middleburg, VA., and South Windsor, CT. Calvin Joustra (Empower Adventures Tampa Bay), Chris Fox (Empower Adventures Middleburg), and Paul Cappadona (Empower Adventure Park at Nomads) join me for a great conversation about the offerings at their Empower Adventures locations, leadership lessons learned from a wide range of challenges faced during 2020, and a sneak preview into what's in store in 2021 at each facility! Additionally, Calvin, Chris, and Paul share information about...
2020-12-03
1h 54