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Transformative Podcast
Historian in the Age of Social Media and Disinformation (Franziska Davies)
Do historians have a responsibility to engage in public and political discussions? How can one balance the role of a public intellectual, an activist and a scholar? How can scholars rise to the occasion in the face of a changing media world and widespread disinformation campaigns? Can their institutions protect them from attempts to silence them through SLAPP suits (Strategic lawsuits against public participation)? In the field of Eastern European History, these questions have become particularly urgent after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Some scholars have chosen to speak out; others have chosen to remain silent. But in fa...
2025-06-11
22 min
Transformative Podcast
Rethinking Social Rights: A Global Lens on Justice and Human Rights (Steven L. B. Jensen)
In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, Radka Šustrová (RECET) speaks with historian and human rights scholar Steven L. B. Jensen. Drawing on his recent keynote at the rountable titled “European Strategies for Strengthening Social Partnership and Labour Rights” in Vienna and his influential work on the global history of human rights, Steven Jensen explores how economic and social rights were fought for—particularly by socialist states and Global South actors—on the international stage after 1945. From Cold War diplomacy to the institutional battles within the United Nations and International Labour Organisation, this conversation highlights the legacies of internationalism, the enduri...
2025-05-21
17 min
Bariatric Journal
Can We Reverse Diabetes from the Duodenum?
Welcome back to another episode of “Health Breakthroughs,” where we explore the latest in medical innovation. Today, we’re diving into something that could be a game-changer for millions of people living with type 2 diabetes – a new outpatient endoscopic treatment called ReCET.Rewiring the GutType 2 diabetes has traditionally been managed with medications – pills, injections, insulin – all targeting symptoms. But what if we could go to the source of the problem and start fixing things upstream?That’s exactly what ReCET – short for Re-cellularization via Electroporation Therapy – aims to do. It’s a cutting-edge, non-th...
2025-05-12
12 min
Transformative Podcast
Social Justice: Rethinking Europe’s 20th Century (Martin Conway, Camilo Erlichman)
What does social justice mean in a European context—and how has that meaning evolved through dictatorship, democracy, and division? In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, Radka Šustrová speaks with historians Martin Conway and Camilo Erlichman about their new co-edited volume, Social Justice in 20th Century Europe (Cambridge University Press, 2024). Together, they explore the conceptual, political, and disciplinary challenges of writing a history of social justice—and how this approach unsettles classical narratives of 20th-century Europe. From labour and gender to postwar reconstruction and European integration, the episode offers a rich historical perspective on justice as both a contes...
2025-04-30
24 min
Transformative Podcast
Dismantling Authoritarian Rule in Poland (Jan T. Gross, Magda Szcześniak)
This episode captures (the beginning of) a conversation between cultural studies scholar Magda Szcześniak (University of Warsaw) and historian Jan Tomasz Gross (emeritus, Princeton University) who – while studying Polish contemporary history during the past decades – published a book co-authored by Stephen Kotkin on "uncivil society" in 2010. It offered a powerful explanation for the implosion of communism in 1989. Not long ago, we witnessed an election defeat of a non-communist authoritarian regime in Poland and are observing a tough and twisted process of dismantling that regime. The discussion is initiated and moderated by János Mátyás Kovács (senior rese...
2025-04-09
17 min
Transformative Podcast
Inferiority Complexes in Soviet Development (Alessandro Iandolo)
To what extent were Soviet engagements with the Third World characterized by solidarity during the Cold War? And to what extent did these same engagements conceal imperial ambitions? In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, Alessandro Iandolo (UCL) talks to Rosamund Johnston (RECET) about how concrete development projects could be viewed quite differently by the different actors involved. He also talks about how his own perspective on these projects has changed, as he approaches them in his new research from different angles. If all of those involved came to be almost in agreement on one point, he argues, it...
2025-03-19
21 min
Transformative Podcast
Welfare States and Social Justice in 20th Century Central Europe (Radka Šustrová)
Studying social justice reveals the promises a regime - liberal or otherwise - makes to its citizens. It also reveals how citizens interpret these promises. But to what extent should we use the term “social justice” to understand societies excluding entire cohorts - most notoriously Jews and Roma in territories occupied by the Nazis during World War II? By focusing on exactly this period, and taking the example of the Nazi Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, Radka Šustrová discusses not only how welfare states (as much as culture, literature, or media) have historically cemented nationalist projects, but also how thorou...
2025-02-26
10 min
Transformative Podcast
Polish communist women, postwar socialist emancipation efforts, and how to write about them today (Agnieszka Mrozik)
Who were the communist women who designed and implemented the socialist project of women’s emancipation not only in Poland, but around the world? How did they conceptualize emancipation? How to write about them today, when any association with communism arouses resistance, and communists are either erased from history or stereotypically captured as traitors to the nation? We talk with Agnieszka Mrozik about her book "Female architects of the Polish People’s Republic: Communist women, literature, and women’s emancipation in postwar Poland" (2022). Agnieszka Mrozik is an associate professor of literary studies at the Institute of Literary Research of the Polish...
2025-02-05
17 min
Transformative Podcast
South Slavic Languages and Vienna's Linguistic Landscape (Katharina Tyran)
Vienna’s walls are full of signs, stickers and graffitis in South Slavic languages. How does this come about? – In this episode, Leonid Motz (RECET) talks to Prof. Katharina Tyran (University of Helsinki) about Vienna’s linguistic landscape and how it is shaped by Post-Yugoslav migrants. What can we learn about power dynamics from the linguistic practices in which they engage? Tyran highlights how – often subversive or subcultural – linguistic signs are rooted in transnational cultural contexts that transcend the linguistic borders of the modern nation-state. Katharina Tyran is an Associate Professor of Slavic Philology at the University of Helsinki...
2025-01-15
18 min
Transformative Podcast
Embedded Economic Thinking (Małgorzata Mazurek)
In this episode, Małgorzata Mazurek (Columbia University) engages in a discussion with Thục Linh Nguyễn Vũ (RECET) on how Michał Kalecki and Ludwik Landau, Polish economists in the interwar period, responded to local and global challenges such as poverty and the Great Depression. Embedded in the Second Polish Republic — a fragile political entity — the economists in question generated innovative ideas about mass employment and economic development. Małgorzata Mazurek is an associate Professor in Polish Studies in the History Department at Columbia University. Her interests include the history of social sciences, international development, the social history of labor and cons...
2024-12-04
20 min
Transformative Podcast
Studying Land in Southeast Europe (Katarina Kušić)
How is land central to socialist and postsocialist transformations in Southeast Europe? In this episode, Katarina Kušić (University of Vienna) tells Jelena Đureinović (RECET) about land as more than an object of policy, the perspectives on studying it and the importance of rural areas and marginalised actors. Dr. Katarina Kušić is a Marie-Skłodowska Curie Actions Postdoctoral Fellow at the Research Platform “Transformations and Eastern Europe” at the University of Vienna. Her current project investigates the relations that make and remake the meaning of land in political, social, ecological, and economic transformations, looking at policymaking, everyday ex...
2024-11-14
16 min
Transformative Podcast
Dreaming of Utopia: The Life and Times of Christian Rakovsky (Maria Todorova)
This podcast episode is partly a summary of the main points Prof. Todorova developed in her book "Imagining Utopia: The Lost World of Socialists at Europe's Margins", partly a chronological extension into the decades that were not covered by the book. This is done by focusing on the life and activities of Christian Rakovsky (1873-1941), as well as the assessments in the aftermath of his death. The change of the scales of analysis would allow Todorova to demonstrate the interplay between center and periphery, especially the "paradox" of socialism in agrarian societies and the attitude to the national question...
2024-10-23
33 min
Transformative Podcast
Abortion and Emancipation in Ukraine (Kateryna Ruban)
In this episode, Kateryna Ruban talks with Zsófia Lóránd about how the history of abortion in Ukraine and Soviet Union can help us understand contemporary reproductive struggles and modern Ukrainian history. Kateryna’s future book tells a story of a female obstetrician-gynecologist in a postwar Transcarpathian hospital who performed abortions during Stalinism when abortion was illegal and later, showcases a doctor who insisted on professional autonomy despite the desire of political leaders to fully control the procedure. Abortion was a matter of intense public debates before 1917 and particularly in the 1920s, when many doctors argued that abort...
2024-10-02
20 min
Transformative Podcast
Prague as Hub of Anti-Colonialism (Mikuláš Pešta)
Once a “hub of anti-colonialism,” the Czech capital Prague might be viewed today a “hub of anti-Communism” instead. How did this shift take place? In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, Mikuláš Pešta (Czech Academy of Science + Charles University, Prague) guides Rosamund Johnston (RECET) through the sites and organizations associated with student and Marxist activism in the city, and reflects upon the limited legacies of both. How did the international activists resident in Prague during the Cold War shape the city? And to what extent did their individual views matter within organizations often understood as mere fronts for Soviet policy?
2024-07-31
14 min
Transformative Podcast
Making European Freedom of Movement (Madeleine Dungy)
Freedom movement just means removing migration barriers and letting people move around freely - or does it? In this episode, Madeleine Dungy of NTNU Trondheim discusses the complicated making of European free movement in the 1960s and 1970s with RECET scientific director Jannis Panagiotidis. At a time of reinforced national social welfare behind the border, she argues, governments, social actors, multilateral institutions, and NGOs had to work hard to reconcile the goals of broad regional mobility and deep social protection. Madeleine Dungy is an Associate Professor at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. She works on the...
2024-07-10
17 min
Transformative Podcast
Nuclear Energy: From Dark Past to Green Future? (Anna Weichselbraun, Elisabeth Röhrlich, Stephen G. Gross)
In this special edition of the RECET transformative podcast, we revisit the recent RECET festival, where speakers from around the globe discussed ‘Green Transformations.’ In this excerpt, three panelists charted the history of nuclear energy—from its ‘dark past’ to, perhaps, its ‘green future.’ Stephen Gross is the author of Energy and Power: Germany in the Age of Oil, Atoms and Climate Change (Oxford University Press, 2023). He was joined by Elisabeth Röhrlich, author of Inspectors for Peace: A History of the International Atomic Energy Agency (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2022). They spoke alongside Anna Weichselbraun, from the University of V...
2024-06-19
27 min
Gagarin, the Eurozine podcast
It's important to be open | Knowledgeable Youth #2
In the second episode of Knowledgeable Youth, the students of the Free People Educational Hub discuss a theme that is close to their current experience and many others' in Vienna: migration. The group of Ukrainian students explore migration with Ukrainian scientist and researcher Olena Yermakova of RECET, drawing insights from her article "The Way Home.“ Join the students as they reflect on migration through their personal experience of forced displacement. Knowledgable Youth: Science Communication in Times of War is co-organised by Eurozine, RECET, Radio Orange and the Free People Educational Hub in Vienna. The project is funded by the Cultural De...
2024-06-18
19 min
Gagarin, the Eurozine podcast
I feel freedom when I am in my school | Knowledgeable Youth #1
Welcome to the first episode in the Knowledgeable Youth series! This series is developed by students from the Free People Educational Hub – a school for young people from Ukraine based in Vienna, who have been displaced by Russia's war on Ukraine. Together, they explore current themes in the social sciences. This episode introduces the young voices behind Knowledgeable Youth and shares how education is a means to freedom for them. This project was co-ordinated by Carine Chen (Eurozine) and Irena Remestwenski (RECET). Knowledgable Youth: Science Communication in Times of War is co-organised by Eurozine, RECET, Radio Orange and the Free Pe...
2024-06-11
20 min
Transformative Podcast
Racism Against Easter Europeans in Germany (Jannis Panagiotidis, Hans-Christian Petersen)
Is there such a thing as racism against people from Eastern Europe - people who in their majority would be considered"white" in terms of skin color? Drawing on historical and contemporary insights, in this episode RECET scientific director Jannis Panagiotidis and his co-author Hans-Christian Petersen discuss key findings of their new book Antiosteuropäischer Rassismus in Deutschland (Anti-East European Racism in Germany). Hans-Christian Petersen is a researcher at the Federal Institute for Culture and History of Eastern Europe (BKGE) Oldenburg and a lecturer at the Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg. His research interests include Russian-German his...
2024-05-29
17 min
Transformative Podcast
The Liberal Exodus? (Félix Krawatzek)
Who are the people who left Russia after the beginning of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022? Is this an exodus of politically active liberals in opposition to the regime? What role does the military mobilization of young men play? Where do people go, and what do they do in their places of exile? In this episode, Félix Krawatzek (ZOiS Berlin) discusses some key insights of his research on the topic with RECET scientific director Jannis Panagiotidis. Félix Krawatzek is Head of the Research Unit Youth and Generational Change at the Center for East European and Int...
2024-05-08
16 min
Transformative Podcast
Radio and Politics in Czechoslovakia (Rosamund Johnston)
What does radio tell us about state socialism and the post-1945 history of Czechoslovakia? In this episode, Rosamund Johnston (RECET) tells Jelena Đureinović (also RECET) about radio and politics in socialist Czechoslovakia, highlighting the role of radio reporters and reception among listeners and discussing the contemporary implications of the study of Cold War radio. Rosamund Johnston is a postdoctoral researcher at RECET. She is the author of Red Tape: Radio and Politics in Czechoslovakia, 1945-1969, published by Stanford University Press. She also co-authored one book of public history, Havel in America: Interviews with American Intellectuals, Politicians, and Artists, released by Czech...
2024-04-17
14 min
Transformative Podcast
Intra-Yugoslav Albanian Migration during Socialism (Rory Archer)
The always growing knowledge production about socialist Yugoslavia has not sufficiently or adequately addressed the histories of Albanians in Yugoslavia. During the socialist period, many Albanians migrated in search of work from Kosovo and Macedonia to other parts of Yugoslavia, mostly to the country's northwest. In this episode, Rory Archer (RECET/Research Plattform "Transfromations and Eastern Europe") tells Jelena Đureinović (RECET) about the social history of Yugoslav Albanian labour migration during socialism, focusing on its background, perception, and the heterogeneous nature of the Albanian micro-communities across Yugoslavia. Dr. Rory Archer is a social historian of 20th century Southeast Europe whose wo...
2024-03-27
15 min
Transformative Podcast
SPECIAL ISSUE: Knowledgeable Youth (Carine Chen, Irena Remestwenski)
Over the past year and a half, RECET has carried out its very first youth project titled "Knowledgeable Youth: Science Communication in Times of War". Together with our partners Eurozine and Radio Orange, we reached out to Ukrainian refugee youngsters living in Vienna and invited them to get to know the world of academic research and science communication. You are listening to the first of four podcast episodes produced by Ukrainian youths who arrived in Vienna following the start of the Russian invasion. The youngsters interview the founder of their school Iryna Khamayko and share insights into th...
2024-03-06
20 min
Transformative Podcast
Sea, Sex and Tourism in Socialist Yugoslavia (Anita Buhin)
Who were the Yugoslav Casanovas of mass tourism? What are the practices of othering and meanings behind romantic and sexual encounters of local young men and foreign female tourists in the Yugoslav Adriatic? In this episode, Anita Buhin tells Jelena Đureinović about so-called galebovi (seagulls) in socialist Yugoslavia and various economic, cultural and social aspects of this phenomenon, typical for the broader Mediterranean region and the development of mass tourism. Dr. Anita Buhin is a cultural historian of socialist Yugoslavia in the Mediterranean context whose work focuses on the relations between popular culture and tourism. She is a...
2024-02-14
13 min
Transformative Podcast
Upward Mobility through Higher Education in Socialist Poland (Agata Zysiak)
What obstacles did first generation students face in socialist Poland? And how might their biographies help us design affirmative action drives today? In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, Dr. Agata Zysiak tells Rosamund Johnston (RECET) how political reform of higher education is never enough by itself to overhaul membership of a country’s intellectual elite. Instead, these reforms rely on interpretation and implementation at multiple levels—both within and beyond the university’s walls. Ultimately, Zysiak explains that there came to exist a “clash of privileges” in socialist Poland, between state-support for working class and peasant students on the one han...
2024-01-24
14 min
Transformative Podcast
Will Ukrainian Refugees Return? (Olena Yermakova)
Ukrainian refugees make up a staggering number - over 6 million globally. Millions more left before 2022 as labour migrants. What are these people's intentions for returning? Who will return, and who will stay? In this episode, Daniel Jerke (RECET) discusses with Olena Yermakova (Jagiellonian University/RECET) insights from her fieldwork data that were presented in a recent article on the RECET blog. Yermakova goes deep into the interpersonal dynamics and psychological factors, explaining why survey answers might differ from actual outcomes. Olena Yermakova is an interdisciplinary researcher focusing on migration. She is doing her PhD at the Jagiellonian...
2024-01-03
18 min
Transformative Podcast
Closed Borders and the Open Society (Frank Wolff)
Can there be an open, liberal, democratic society behind closed borders? In this episode, Frank Wolff argues that erecting ever higher walls and implementing violent border regimes has a corrosive effect on democracy and rule of law in the societies these measures are allegedly meant to protect. Frank Wolff leads the research group "Internalizing Borders: The Social and Normative Consequences of the European Border Regime" at the Center for Interdisciplinary Research (ZiF: Zentrum für interdisziplinäre Forschung) at Bielefeld University. Together with Volker M. Heins, he recently published the book Hinter Mauern: Geschlossene Grenzen als Gefahr fü...
2023-12-06
15 min
Transformative Podcast
Actors of Yugoslav Socialist Internationalism (Peter Wright)
What do the life trajectories of Yugoslav experts abroad and students from the Global South in Yugoslavia tell us about Yugoslav connections with the postcolonial world? In this episode, Peter Wright (University of Illinois) zooms in on the actors of Yugoslav socialist internationalism with Jelena Đureinović (RECET). Discussing the positionalities of experts, political activism of students, and questions of racism and anti-racism, Wright argues that the experts and students help us see Yugoslavia’s relationship with the postcolonial world a little bit differently than how it is usually represented. Peter Wright is an assistant professor in the Depa...
2023-11-15
18 min
Transformative Podcast
Remembering the Neoliberal Turn (Veronika Pehe)
The memory of how neoliberal economic policies were implemented in Eastern Europe after 1989 is still relevant to the region’s politicians, blue-collar workers and white-collar managers, and cultural producers. In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, Veronika Pehe tells Rosamund Johnston (RECET) how political, vernacular, and cultural memories of the “neoliberal turn” sometimes overlap, sometimes do not, and how this continues to generate forms of social cohesion and division today. While stressing the diversity of experiences within the region (with "memory wars" relating to the 1990s sharper in some places than in others), Pehe argues that by understanding the events...
2023-10-25
14 min
Transformative Podcast
Barcelona ’92: The New Europe at the Olympic Games (Leslie Waters)
Does international sport foster capitalist economics and political liberalism among participating states? In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, Leslie Waters (University of Texas, El Paso) tells Rosamund Johnston (RECET) about the Olympics’ “mixed” record in this regard. Barcelona 1992 introduced to global audiences a host of new European states. But the games also showcased the enduring legacy of state socialist sporting prowess. Lustration tore through some national Olympic committees while, in others, post-socialist elites used the institutions of international sport to rebrand as political liberals. Ultimately, Waters argues, sportswashing is not new, and was undertaken here by hosts Spain...
2023-10-04
15 min
Transformative Podcast
Economic Memories of Transformation (Till Hilmar)
Economic thinking is far from the preserve of central bankers and policy wonks. In dozens of interviews in the Czech Republic and the former East Germany, sociologist Till Hilmar asked healthcare workers and engineers about their experiences of the transformation period to understand how economic shifts are remembered, and what memories can tell us about processes of economic change. As a result, he gained a picture of transformation “from below.” In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, Hilmar tells Rosamund Johnston why people’s views of the 1990s still matter now. He explains how his work sheds light on how pe...
2023-08-02
15 min
Transformative Podcast
Beyond Political History: Social and Cultural Dynamics of Socialist Poland (Małgorzata Fidelis)
In recent years, the narrative of the history of Polish socialism has changed as it moved beyond a narrow scholarly focus on political elites and party-state structures. In this episode, Thục Linh Nguyễn Vũ (RECET) speaks to Małgorzata Fidelis (University of Illinois at Chicago) about her work that examines everyday socialism through the prism of social and cultural history across various political moments in Poland. Zooming in on ordinary people and practices, Fidelis adds new layers to how the ebb and flow of socialism and transformation in Poland are understood. Małgorzata Fidelis is Associate Profess...
2023-07-12
15 min
Transformative Podcast
Minority Languages in Russia (Jeremy Bradley)
How can the challenges faced by minoritized languages of the Russian Federation and their speaker communities be understood through the lens of Russia’s colonial expansion? In this newest episode, Leonid Motz (RECET) talks to Dr. Jeremy Bradley (University of Vienna), exploring the historical and social transformation of minority language use and study in Russia and the threats of Russification and assimilation. How do communities overcome the considerable obstacles posed by the present-day Russian state to maintain and revitalize their languages successfully? Jeremy Bradley is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Vienna’s Department of Finno-Ugrian Studi...
2023-06-21
17 min
Transformative Podcast
Transformative Power Of Utopias (Kristen Ghodsee)
What brings together Pythagoras and Wonder Woman? In her dazzling new book, Everyday Utopia: What 2,000 Years of Wild Experiments Can Teach Us About the Good Life, Professor Kristen Ghodsee shows how, throughout history, humanity has felt the need to imagine and experiment with alternative ways to organize daily life, and offers a radically hopeful vision for how to build more content and connected societies. In this new episode, RECET’s own Anna Calori had the pleasure to sit with Professor Kristen Ghodsee and discuss about the transformative power of utopias and the militant significance of hope in the darkest of tim...
2023-05-31
19 min
Donauwellen. Der Südostcast
#17: Runder Tisch: Humanities im Krieg – Zwischen Haltung und Zurückhaltung
Wie finden humanitäres Engagement und Humanities zusammen, ohne sich einen „Bias“ vorwerfen lassen zu müssen? Wo ist eine Abgrenzung zwischen wissenschaftlicher Analyse und persönlicher Meinung – manchmal auch gegen die nachvollziehbaren Reflexe der Betroffenheit – nötig? Wie funktioniert gelungene Wissenschaftskommunikation in diesem Spannungsfeld zwischen ethischer Haltung und wissenschaftlicher Zurückhaltung und welche Rolle spielen die Sozialen Medien? Ein Round Table-Gespräch mit Franziska Davies (Historikerin, LMU München) Judith Kohlenberger (Kulturwissenschaftlerin und Migrationsforscherin, WU Wien) Oxana Matiychuk (Kulturmanagerin, Publizistin und Germanistin, Universität Tscherniwzi/Czernowitz) Philipp Ther (Director RECET, Institut für Osteuropäische Geschichte, Universität Wien)
2023-05-26
1h 34
Transformative Podcast
Why Studying Migration Matters (Jannis Panagiotidis)
In this thought-provoking conversation, Thuc Linh Nguyen Vu (RECET) and Jannis Panagiotidis (RECET) dive deep into the question of why migration — as a scholarly field and an intrinsic aspect of contemporary world — deeply matters to historians and policy makers. Panagiotidis and Nguyen Vu also explore new research avenues such as the examination of precarious Whiteness of Eastern Europeans and the importance of migrant perspectives in the debates on migration. Jannis Panagiotidis is the Scientific Director of the Research Center for the History of Transformation. From 2014 until 2020, he was Junior Professor for Migration and Integration of Germans from Russ...
2023-05-10
17 min
Transformative Podcast
Banal Nationalism in Soviet Ukraine (Fabian Baumann)
In this episode, Fabian Baumann (RECET) talks to Irena Remestwenski (also RECET) about ‘banal’ forms of nationalism and visual representations of Ukrainianness employed by postwar Soviet propaganda, as well as the role of the economy in constructing Soviet Ukrainian identity in late socialism. Baumann sheds light on national narratives that were permissible under socialism and those that were out of bounds and also attempts to contribute to the pre-history of the 1991 referendum, in which Ukrainians overwhelmingly chose national independence. Dr. des. Fabian Baumann is a visiting postdoctoral researcher at RECET and holder of a Postdoc.Mobility grant from th...
2023-04-19
23 min
Transformative Podcast
Past and Present: Migration, Crisis and Public History in Poland (Dariusz Stola)
With the unfolding crisis at the Polish-Belarussian border, and the Russian war against Ukraine, Polish society, public opinion and policy-makers have been confronted with critical challenges of migration and displacement. This is a new stage in Poland's rich history of migration, which until recently was dominated by large outflows and limited inflows. In this episode, Thuc Linh Nguyen Vu talks to prof. Dariusz Stola (Polish Academy of Sciences) in order to unpack the historical entanglements of migration, Jewish history, minority studies, and contemporary public history in Poland. Dariusz Stola is a historian and professor at the Institute for Political Studies, P...
2023-03-15
17 min
Transformative Podcast
Sexologists in Socialist Czechoslovakia (Kateřina Lišková)
Experts enjoyed a great deal of authority in state socialist Eastern Europe - but some experts were more equal than others. In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, sociologist Kateřina Lišková charts the changing ways in which medical experts held “the ear of the state” throughout the socialist period, and analyzes what they did with their room to maneuver. Focusing on the work of sexologists in particular, Lišková tells host Rosamund Johnston (RECET) what sex and home life can ultimately reveal about the political priorities of socialism. Kateřina Lišková is a researcher at the Institute of History of...
2023-02-22
14 min
Transformative Podcast
Churches in Ukraine (Yuliya Yurchuk)
Part of Ukraine's ongoing struggle for independence from Russia is the establishment of a Ukrainian Orthodox church independent from the Moscow Patriarchate. Already before the full-scale Russian invasion of 24 February 2022, this resulted in a fragmented church landscape, which in the wake of the invasion has become ever more politicized. In this episode, historian Yuliya Yurchuk (Södertörn University) will discuss the origins and implications of this complex situation, as well as the role that the different Ukrainian churches have played in the process of nation-building. Yuliya Yurchuk is a Senior Lecturer of History at Södertörn University, Sweden. She spe...
2023-02-01
16 min
Transformative Podcast
Dialectics of (Im)Mobility: Historical Transformations Through the Lens of Movement (Steffi Marung)
The Covid-19 pandemic has forced governments across the world to rethink (free) movement of peoples and things, and to revise mobility regimes in the face of new constraints. This is not a new phenomenon, argues Steffi Marung (University of Leipzig) in this episode of the Transformative Podcast. To a certain extent, each moment of major socio-economic or political transformation in the 20th century has been also characterised by a change in our understanding of, and attitudes towards, mobility. In conversation with Anna Calori (RECET), Dr. Marung reflects on how we can better understand historical transformations and caesuras by looking at mo...
2023-01-12
17 min
Transformative Podcast
Guns and Globalization (Ned Richardson-Little)
If arms exports often rely on production processes and transportation networks spanning multiple countries, then their regulation has historically taken place at the level of the state. In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, Ned Richardson-Little (University of Erfurt) discusses this paradox and its effects on different groups involved in the arms trade with Rosamund Johnston (RECET). He also reflects on why it makes little sense to view the officially-sanctioned and “illicit” arms trades through separate lenses, and on how historians might take morality into account when writing about global arms sales. Ned Richardson-Little is a Freigeist Fellow at the Unive...
2022-12-14
16 min
Transformative Podcast
Racism By and Against Eastern Europeans (Ivan Kalmar)
East Europeans are white - or are they? In this episode, Jannis Panagiotidis (RECET) interviews Ivan Kalmar (University of Toronto) on his new book, in which he contends that the precarity of East European whiteness is one of the drivers of the region's illiberal turn, turning East Europeans into both victims and perpetrators of racism. Ivan Kalmar is a professor of anthropology at the University of Toronto. He is the author of White But Not Quite: Central Europe' Illiberal Revolt, published by Bristol University Press in 2022.
2022-11-23
19 min
Transformative Podcast
Ukrainian Refugees in Austria (Judith Kohlenberger)
The Russian military invasion of Ukraine that commenced on the February 24, 2022, led to the largest forced migration flows in Europe since WWII. In this episode, Irena Remestwenski (RECET) talks with Dr. Judith Kohlenberger about a rapid-response survey of Ukrainian refugees arriving in Austria. Dr. Kohlenberger sheds light on Ukrainian refugees' sociodemographic background, choice of host country, as well as their return and stay intentions and discusses implications for integration policies. Judith Kohlenberger a post-doctoral researcher at the Vienna University of Economics and Business (WU) working on forced migration and integration. She was a contributor to the Persons in...
2022-11-03
29 min
Transformative Podcast
Development Assistance as a Transformation Force (Artemy Kalinovsky)
Development as an approach to policy, as a theoretical paradigm, and as a force that can transform everyday life has been a powerful tool in changing societies on both sides of the Iron Curtain and in the so-called Global South. In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, Artemy Kalinovsky (Temple University) discusses these and related topics with Thuc Linh Nguyen Vu (RECET). In their conversation they touch upon development assistance to Central Asia and its role in contemporary geopolitics as well as the various meanings and scales of development. Artemy Kalinovsky is Professor at Temple University and a historian...
2022-09-28
13 min
Transformative Podcast
Ukraine’s Fight Against Corruption in the Sphere of Justice (Iryna Shyba)
According to Transparency International's 2021 Corruption Perceptions Index, Ukraine ranked 122nd out of 180 countries in 2021, the second most corrupt in Europe. In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, Ukraine's prominent rule of law activist Iryna Shyba talks to Irena Remestwenski, Managing Director at RECET, about the transformations that Ukraine has gone through since 1991, impressive gains made by various anti-corruption bodies, and the state of Ukraine’s court system in times of war. Iryna Shyba is the former head of Foundation DEJURE, a Ukrainian civil society organization promoting rule of law and reforms in the sphere of justice, and currently Deputy Head of...
2022-09-07
22 min
Transformative Podcast
Anti-Globalism Between the World Wars (Tara Zahra)
How did anti-globalism give birth to the multinational corporation? And how did complaints about “the global economy” shape mass politics at the very moment of its emergence? In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, Tara Zahra (University of Chicago) speaks to Rosamund Johnston (RECET) about the ways in which governments and citizens sought, in the interwar period, to reject global interconnectedness. Zahra charts how anti-globalist ideas were then encoded in the international system following World War II and continue to shape some institutions to this day. Tara Zahra is Homer J. Livingston Professor of History at the University of Chicago. She i...
2022-07-20
14 min
Transformative Podcast
The Revolutionary University? (Jan Surman)
How did the revolutions around Central and Eastern Europe transform higher education? Less than you might think, suggests Jan Surman (Czech Academy of Sciences). In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, he talks to Rosamund Johnston (RECET) about the disappearance of Marxism-Leninism--if not those who taught it--from universities around the former Eastern Bloc. While often understood as catalysts of revolution, Surman argues that the region’s universities have proved far more resistant to change over the decades that followed than other institutions. Dr. Jan Surman is a Lumina quaeruntur fellow at the Masaryk Institute and Archives of the Czech Academy of...
2022-06-29
14 min
Transformative Podcast
Right-Wing Ideology in the Russian-Ukrainian War (Anton Shekhovtsov)
Who has the power of command over the (in)famous Azov regiment, which until recently defended the Ukrainian city of Mariupol under siege and was, at last, captured by the Russian forces? What kind of ideology is really followed by the Azov fighters? How popular are right-wing ideas in Ukraine in general, and how fascist is Russia? In this episode, Dr. Anton Shekhovtsov (Center for Democratic Integrity) talks to Irena Remestwenski (RECET) about the transformations of right-wing ideas both in Russia and in Ukraine. He explains the ambiguous history of the Azov regiment, breaks down the "de-nazification" narrative followed by...
2022-06-09
21 min
Transformative Podcast
China’s Economic Transformations (Federico Pachetti)
Western non-governmental organizations such as the World Bank played a crucial role in China’s economic reforms during the 1980s and 1990s. They facilitated dialogues between Chinese economists and their western counterparts, as well as brought in western known-how on free market economy to China, where Soviet-style planned economy had dominated the economic activities since the 1950s. In this podcast, Dr. Federico Pachetti (RECET) and Dr. Sheng Peng (RECET) discuss both the expectations and realities, which western NGOs faced during their participation in China’s great economic transformations. Federico Pachetti is an associated researcher at RECET and a po...
2022-05-18
16 min
Transformative Podcast
Human Rights Activism in Russia (Anna Dobrovolskaya)
Overshadowed by the military aggression against Ukraine, "Memorial" was banned and forced to close in Russia. The oldest non-governmental organization in the region, dating back to the late Soviet era and Andrey Sakharov's engagement, "Memorial" has been a prominent actor in Human Rights and memory politics. Anna Dobrovolskaya is a former Executive Director of the Human Rights Center "Memorial". In this episode, she is talking to RECET's Managing Director Irena Remestwenski on roots, activities, heritage of the movement, and not the least on hope and perspectives for democracy in Russia.
2022-04-27
15 min
Transformative Podcast
Europe: Liberty, Solidarity, Power (Laurent Warlouzet)
United Europe has many dimensions. In the history of European unification, liberal projects of economic integration have coexisted and competed with ideas of social justice & solidarity, but also of Europe as a power. In this episode, RECET's Scientific Director Jannis Panagiotidis discusses the book "Europe contre Europe: Entre liberté, solidarité et puissance" with its author Laurent Warlouzet. Laurent Warlouzet is professor at Paris Sorbonne University, chair of European history. A former postdoctoral fellow at the European University Institute and at the London School of Economics, he has published a book entitled "Governing Europe in a Globalized World. Neolibearlism and its Alter...
2022-04-06
19 min
Transformative Podcast
Back to Totalitarianism? Russia’s War in Ukraine (Sergey Radchenko)
Putin´s aggression against Ukraine released a landslide change in international politics, economy, academia, and public culture. Within Russia itself, it triggered an avalanche of repressive policies, which are the culmination of Russia's long-term crackdown on any form of opposition to the regime. Russia's ideological program behind the invasion re-appropriates and re-writes history, while the country itself returns to its authoritarian past. In this episode, Anastassiya Schacht (RECET) is talking to Prof. Dr. Sergey Radchenko, Wilson E. Schmidt Distinguished Professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies and a scholar of Cold War and Sino-Soviet security p...
2022-03-16
15 min
Transformative Podcast
Russische Invasion in die Ukraine (Philipp Ther)
Die russische Invasion in die Ukraine ist ein Angriff auf ganz Europa. In diesen bestürzenden Zeiten steht das Forschungszentrum RECET unseren ukrainischen KollegInnen bei, die gezwungen sind, sich in Luftschutzkellern zu verstecken und für Ihre Freiheit kämpfen. In der heutigen Sonderausgabe veröffentlichen wir neu das Interview des preisgekrönten Osteuropa-Historikers und RECET-Gründers Philipp Ther mit Einordnungen zur Lage in der Ukraine, zu den historischen Hintergründen des Konflikts und zu den Ambitionen Russlands. Die Diskussion hat Ulrich Kühn geführt. Zuerst veröffentlicht bei: "Das Gespräch"| NDR Kultur | 27.02.2022
2022-03-04
25 min
Transformative Podcast
Performative Citizenship (Valeria Korablyova)
Ukrainians went from being a nation of occasional voters whose rights existed mainly on paper in the 1990’s to a society with strong civil society institutions and a vibrant democracy post Maidan Revolution of 2013/14. In this episode moderated by Irena Remestwenski (RECET), Valeria Korablyova (Charles University in Prague) reflects upon the concept of performative citizenship, the role of Volodymyr Zelenskyy, and the new empowered Ukrainian citizen who is willing to make a difference in the political field. Dr. Valeria Korablyova is Senior Research Fellow at Charles University, Department of East European Studies. She received her habilitation in 2015 fro...
2022-02-23
14 min
Transformative Podcast
Global Health: A View From the Socialist World (Dora Vargha)
The Covid-19 pandemic has shown the world the importance of coordinating health policies at a global level. What can we learn from the history and politics of global health? In this episode, moderated by Anna Calori (RECET), Dora Vargha reflects upon the role of the socialist world in shaping the recent history of medicine, as well as current approaches to global health and epidemics. Dora Vargha is Professor of History and Medical Humanities at the University of Exeter and at Humboldt University, Berlin. She is principal investigator of the ERC-funded project “Socialist Medicine: an Alternative Global Health History”, and the “Connect...
2022-02-02
14 min
Transformative Podcast
Protests in Kazakhstan (Viktoria Morasch & Anastassiya Schacht)
The first week of January 2022 was largely shaped by news of protests rapidly escalating all across Kazakhstan. In the span of only a few days, the situation changed from nationwide peaceful protests citing economic reasons, over demands for political change, violent rallies and lootings in the country´s largest city, to what appears as a coup, resulting from a power struggle between the former and the current presidents. With the latter calling in the foreign troops, and Russia significantly involved yet again - the week has seen a landslide change in the political landscape of the world´s 9th largest co...
2022-01-12
13 min
Transformative Podcast
Czech Vienna (Mojmír Stránský & Věra Gregorová)
In the last days of the Habsburg monarchy, Vienna vied with Prague for the title of the largest Czech city. Today, a tiny fraction of the Austrian capital’s population would identify as Czech. Nonetheless, community centers and clubs established during the heyday of Czech migration continue to exist. In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, Rosamund Johnston (RECET) speaks to two of those most involved in their maintenance, Mojmír Stránský (RECET) and Dr. Věra Gregorová. Introducing Czech Vienna’s landmarks and associations, Stránský and Gregorová reflect upon why these spaces continue to be relevant, and indeed upon...
2021-12-23
12 min
Transformative Podcast
Transformation of Persia Through Oil (Leonardo Davoudi)
How did the discovery of oil in Persia transform Persian society and British imperialism in the Middle East at the turn of the century? In this episode moderated by Dr. Sheng Peng (RECET), Leonardo Davoudi explores the formal and informal dealings of politicians, investors, civil servants, and intermediaries during the development of the Persian petroleum industry from its uncertain beginnings to becoming one of British Empire’s most valuable pocessions in the Middle East. Dr. Leonardo Davoudi is an associate member of Oxford University’s History Faculty and a researcher with the Global History of Capitalism project at the Oxford Centr...
2021-12-01
15 min
Transformative Podcast
Journalism in Central Europe (Gerald Schubert)
How have technologies, politics, and social expectations transformed the work of journalists in Central Europe over the past three decades? And which journalistic practices and market forces might combine to characterize a “Central European” media environment? In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, Rosamund Johnston (RECET) speaks to Gerald Schubert, a reporter on Central and Eastern Europe for Austrian newspaper Der Standard. He reflects on a career spanning 20 years in both the Czech Republic and Austria, and on a “worsening” situation for journalists today in both of these states, as well as elsewhere in Europe.
2021-11-10
12 min
Transformative Podcast
Transformation Through Architecture (Łukasz Stanek)
Not many know that Accra, the capital of Ghana, is home to architecture designed by Eastern Europeans. In this episode, Thuc Linh Nguyen Vu (RECET) talks to Prof. Łukasz Stanek about his award-winning book, in which he examines the role Eastern European experts - architects and engineers - played in supporting newly postcolonial states in their efforts to bring about a social transformation through urbanization. How can architecture contribute to, bring about, and document major changes in the global Cold War dynamic? What lessons can we learn from taking a close look at the entanglements between postcolonialism and socialism? Łukasz Sta...
2021-10-20
14 min
Transformative Podcast
Politics of Free Movement (Cecilia Bruzelius)
Free movement of people is a contentious issue. In this episode, moderated by RECET's Scientific Director Jannis Panagiotidis, Cecilia Bruzelius talks about how states deal with the resulting challenges to labor markets and welfare states, what free movement means for European citizenship, and what mass emigration does to East European societies. Prof. Dr. Cecilia Bruzelius is a Junior Professor of Political Science at Tübingen University. In her research, she focuses on free movement in history and the present, with a particular focus on the issues of citizenship and the welfare state.
2021-09-29
15 min
Transformative Podcast
Peripheral Liberalism (Tobias Rupprecht)
In this episode, RECET's Dr. Anna Calori talks with Tobias Rupprecht, Head of the Junior Research Group "Peripheral Liberalism", about Tobias's recent project on peripheral liberalism, economic reform debates in socialist countries, and the history of globalisation in the 1990s. Dr. Tobias Rupprecht is a global historian with a particular interest in the history of (state) socialism and (neo)liberalism. His research has mostly addressed Soviet and Eastern European encounters with the Global South, and economic reform debates in socialist countries. He taught Russian history in Denmark and the UK before becoming head of the 'Peripheral Liberalism...
2021-09-09
13 min
Podcast Recet
Eps 9, | 1, 2, 3 Kita Sayang Rama
Tiba saatnya satu persatu mulai mewujudkan mimpinya. Asli sih benci banget sama perpisahan, tapi di satu sisi bangga sama kalian yang udah dewasa dan udah punya prioritas. Maapin kita ya Ram kalo kita punya salah sama lo. Karena lo mo pindah aja makanya kita minta maap hahaha. Sehat, sukses,jaya jaya jaya
2021-08-28
1h 18
Transformative Podcast
Transformation(s) of Sexual Education (Agnieszka Kościańska)
Talking about sex and educating young people about the challenges and questions related to human sexuality is a sensitive and often controversial topic. In this episode, Assoc. Prof. Dr. Agnieszka Kościańska (University of Warsaw) talks to Lukas Becht (RECET) about the rich and fascinating history of sex education in the XX. century with a focus on Poland. It is a story of transformations and conflicts that requires us to rethink linear, teleological and progressivist concepts of transformative historical change. Agnieszka Kościańska is an anthropologist, an Associate Professor in the Department of Ethnology and Cultural Anth...
2021-08-18
12 min
Transformative Podcast
(Post-)Socialist Shakespeare (Eva Spišiaková)
What can translations tell us about the societies in which they are published? In this episode, moderated by Rosamund Johnston (RECET), Dr. Eva Spišiaková (University of Vienna) reflects upon one hundred years of Shakespeare's sonnets in Czech and Slovak translation. Spišiaková uses the "love poems of all love poems" to uncover shifting attitudes towards gender and sexuality in Czechoslovakia, and measure changes accompanying the country's Velvet Revolution in 1989. Eva Spišiaková is a REWIRE postdoctoral fellow at the University of Vienna's Center for Translation Studies. She is the author of Queering Translation History: Shakespe...
2021-07-28
14 min
Transformative Podcast
Modern Autocracies (Sergei Guriev)
Which factors play a leading role in the transformation and collapse of modern autocracies? In this episode, moderated by Anastassiya Schacht (RECET), our guest Prof. Sergei Guriev (Sciences Po) talks about the methods used by modern autocracies to convince their voters, their relationship with the economy and economic crises, and about what it takes to co-opt the country's elites. Sergei Guriev is professor and Scientific Director of the Master and PhD programmes in Economics at SciencePo (Paris). He received his Dr. Sc. (habilitation degree) in Economics and PhD in Applied Math from the Russian Academy of Science. His research interests in...
2021-07-07
14 min
Transformative Podcast
Deindustrializing Societies (Anne-Marie Jeannet)
Milan is a city that is synonymous with industry, as well as with style. In this episode, moderated by Dean Vuletic (RECET), we take a tour of Milan with Prof. Anne-Marie Jeannet as we discuss her research on de-industrializing societies and the political consequences. From the glamorous square of the city centre to the industrial chic of other neighbourhoods, Prof. Jeannet explains how Milan has been transformed by de-industrialization, while still remaining an industrial powerhouse. Anne-Marie Jeannet is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Milan. She studies how changes in the social structure, such as deindustrialization...
2021-06-16
14 min
Transformative Podcast
Resilient Neoliberalism? (Dorothee Bohle)
Governments in East Central Europe have long relied on radical neoliberal reforms as a strategy to leave socialism behind. In this episode, moderated by RECET's founding director Philipp Ther, our guest Prof. Dr. Dorothee Bohle discusses how neoliberalism became resilient once again. She examines the relationship between authoritarianism and neoliberalism and argues for a gendered perspective on the topic. Dorothee Bohle is a professor at the Department of Political and Social Sciences of the European University Institute. She is co-author of Capitalist Diversity on Europe's Periphery (2012), for which she won the Stein Rokkan Prize for Comparative Social Science Research.
2021-05-26
13 min
Transformative Podcast
Legacies of Dissidence (Michal Kopeček)
Is the legacy of dissidence, rather than the legacy of communism, driving the current illiberal turn in some East Central European states' politics? In this episode moderated by Rosamund Johnston (RECET), our guest Michal Kopeček (Institute of Contemporary History, Prague/ Imre Kertész Kolleg, Jena) discusses how dissidents shaped political discourse in the region both before and after the revolutions of 1989. Following the "legacies of dissidence" to the present, Kopeček considers how dissident ideas provide the fuel for culture wars ongoing in East Central Europe today. Michal Kopeček is a historian, co-director of Imre Kertész Kolleg in Jena...
2021-05-05
11 min
Transformative Podcast
Globalism and Its Enemies (Quinn Slobodian)
Is the era of neoliberal globalism over? In this episode moderated by Prof. Dr. Jannis Panagiotidis (Scientific Director, RECET), our guest Assoc. Prof. Dr. Quinn Slobodian (Wellesley College) considers the history and current state of global capitalist governance and asks what directions it may take in the future. Quinn Slobodian is a historian of modern German and international history with a focus on North-South politics, social movements, and the intellectual history of neoliberalism. His most recent book is "Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism" (Harvard University Press, 2018).
2021-04-06
12 min
Podcast Recet
Eps 8, Setaun Ga Ketemu, Tautau Punya Gelar MM, CFII, IGI, CAT, CFTe, MFTA, CSA, CTA
2021 ini bisa dibilang taon pemulihan buat kita kita orang yang ditempa berkali-kali saat 2020. Yang sakit udeh pada sembuh, yang nganggur udeh pada Gawe, tapi yang Jomblo masih pade Jomblo, emang udah prinsip idup. Masih ama kite kite, @rwamsky @firzaviolin @fajarfahrulzi ketabahan bintang tamu @ferdinansitorus
2021-03-07
55 min
X3
23 – Russlanddeutsche+ in der Wissenschaft: zu Gast Jannis Panagiotidis
Akademische Auseinandersetzung mit dem Thema RD+ mit apl. Prof. Dr. Jannis Panagiotidis: Was sind die zentralen Themen der Forschung um Russlanddeutsche in der deutschen Gesellschaft, wie erfolgt die Kontextualisierung mit der sowjetischen Geschichte und an welchen Universitäten wird diese unter anderem betrieben? Ist ein “nieschiges” monothematisches Forschungsfeld überhaupt noch haltbar angesichts der vielfältigen bundesdeutschen Migrationsgesellschaft und der eigenen Heterogenität dieser Zuwanderergruppe? Einige Antworten auf diese und weitere Fragen erfahrt ihr in unserer neuen Folge! SHOWNOTES ➡️ Institut für Migrationsforschung und Interkulturelle Studien (IMIS) ➡️ Research Center for the History of Transformations...
2020-12-01
1h 02
PODCAST SUARADJATI
Eps.59. Pod Recet: Mengenal Saham Jaman Now
Saham bukanlah main. Jadi stop bilang "Main Saham". Karena Saham bukan untuk dipermainkan melainkan untuk perencaan masa depan. Saham for beginner is in the house. PODCAST SUARADJATI with Koin VSI & Valbury Sekuritas Indonesia dengan senang hati menghadirkan perbincangan ringan dan basic mengenai saham. So guys, buat yang mau mengerti bagaimana cara kerja saham, harus banged mantengi perbincangan kita. Kuy, melek saham!
2020-09-04
35 min
PODCAST SUARADJATI
Eps. 52. POD RECET: [18+] Slices of Pornography - First Experience Becomes An Addiction
Enjoy our wild conversations about our first experience become loyal porn consumers and how we finally feel that is an addiction and have each different struggles. Song in this episode: Yellow Claw ft. Chace - Strangers
2020-08-12
31 min
PODCAST SUARADJATI
Eps. 47. Pod. Recet: Privilege
The complex definition & how they put it on.
2020-07-28
04 min
PODCAST SUARADJATI
Eps 44. Pod Recet: Bersepeda Masa Corona
Sorry for noises you might heard. I made this in lunch time. So, I hope you enjoy as much as I enjoyed making this episode. Thank you.
2020-07-21
09 min
Decolonization in Action Podcast
DIA S2 E10 There is no one Vietnam
In this episode, edna bonhomme speaks with Thuc Linh Nguyen Vu about migration, cultural history, Vietnamese Polish relations, Black feminism, and African/Asian diasporas.Thuc Linh Nguyen Vu is currently a postdoctoral fellow (Wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin) in the Global History Division in the History Department at the Freie Universität in Berlin and will start her new position as a postdoctoral fellow at the Research Center for the History of Transformations (RECET) at the University of Vienna in October. Linh earned her PhD from the European University Institute in Florence. Linh is currently working on a book manuscript that examines the i...
2020-06-22
30 min
PODCAST SUARADJATI
Eps. 37. Recet: Stop Looking For Passion!
Passion had stayed all the time in ourselves. Just start to use it passionately.
2020-06-08
10 min
PODCAST SUARADJATI
Eps. 36. RECET: SIZE DOES MATTER
What Size I'm talking about? Not size on your mind.
2020-06-01
16 min
Podcast Recet
Eps 7. Marhaban Yaa Ramadhan. Udahan dong sakitnyaaa!
Bulan puasa gini pasti pada pernah kan berbuat dosa yang disengaja dan pura-pura nggak sengaja? Semoga lancar ya temaaan ibadah puasanya. Jaga kesehatan ya teman-teman! Doakan 2 personil kita ini (Firza & Rama) cepat sembuh yaa 1... 2... 3... (AAMIIN) kalo Fajar mah imunnya udah terdidik sejak dini ceunahh
2020-05-11
50 min
PODCAST SUARADJATI
Eps. 32. Recet: Takut
The purest definition of fear.
2020-05-02
31 min
Podcast Recet
Eps 6. Cukup, Pandemi. CUKUUUUP!!!
Udah rindu banget sama bau mall, rindu ketemu temen-temen, rindu nongkrong sampe lupa waktu, rindu liat keributan di jalan. Sampe bikin podcast aja harus dirumah masing-masing sampe ada yang ngelindur nih. Corona udahan dongggg
2020-04-25
59 min
PODCAST SUARADJATI
Eps. 29. Recet: SELF TALK.
15 Ways untuk merubah hidup dengan metode Psikologi Self-Talk.
2020-04-15
1h 16
PODCAST SUARADJATI
Eps. 27. Recet: Menghiasi Attitude.
How to upgrade your good attitude and to cover your bad attitude.
2020-04-10
52 min
PODCAST SUARADJATI
Eps. 26. Recet: Diagram Friend, Circle of Friendship.
What circle of friendship are you in?
2020-04-08
1h 04
PODCAST SUARADJATI
Eps. 22. Recet: Narasi Dosa
Sebuah semangat literasi untuk diri. Narasi Dosa.
2020-03-31
09 min
PODCAST SUARADJATI
Eps. 19. Recet: Semangat Hati, Diri dan Rohani untuk Negri.
This episode inspired with good deed (initiation) that made by my friends and some of members of NAD (Nulis Ajah Dulu). Mereka membuat mini video yang sangat menyentuh, lewat semangat dan rasa persatuan yang amat besar di tengah Pandemic Covid-19.
2020-03-26
21 min
PODCAST SUARADJATI
Eps. 12. Recet: Ikhtiar dan Tawakal VS Corona
Allah is always be there.
2020-03-18
15 min
PODCAST SUARADJATI
Eps. 07. Recet: pake baju yang bener siii...
3 alasan berbusana baik.
2020-03-05
22 min
Podcast Recet
Eps 5. Candu-Candu Mobile Legends
Huft kesel banget kalo dapet tim n00b. Belom lagi kalo ada yang nyampah. Alhasil dapet assist doang. Game yang bikin kita-kita ini rela ngeluarin uang demi membeli sebuah skin. Para penggiat moba, siapa tau bisa relate sama ocehan kita 😂
2019-12-30
37 min
Podcast Recet
Eps 4. Dari Bahasa Gaul Sampe Bahasa Goib
You guys pasti sering denger orang pake bahasa "kek" "bats" dan sejenisnya. Banyak yang bilang itu bahasa gaol gitu kek bahasa yang lebih efisien soalnya kek cepet aja gitu ngomongnya.... tapi karena random.... akhirnya disangkutpautkan dengan bahasa goib dan hal-hal goib HAHAHAHAHA. Nano-nano lah pokoknya episode kali ini.
2019-12-22
48 min
Podcast Recet
Eps 3. Passion ku maunya ku dirimu
Kalo ngomongin passion tuh seru. Kadang ada yang maju terus sama passionnya, ada yang ditunda dulu passionnya, ada yang ninggalin passionnya. Apapun itu, do what you love and love what you do, peepsss :))))))
2019-11-25
48 min
Podcast Recet
Eps 2. Hal Ter... (malu lah pokoknya kalo diceritain)
Pernah gaksiiiih ngalamin hal yang sebenernya gak mau dialamin tapi mau gak mau kita harus mengalaminya??!!! Sabar adalah jawaban dari episode kali ini! Hahahahaha
2019-11-11
40 min
Podcast Recet
Eps 1. Titik Terendah dalam Hidup
Buat kalian yang sedang mengalami atau bahkan udah selesai mengalami fase yang cukup "yaelah" ini, semoga terhibur dan siapa tau ada yang relate. Haha! Selamat mendengarkan :))))
2019-11-05
29 min
Podcast Recet
Podcast Recet (Trailer)
2019-11-04
00 min
Rapot
29. Unboxing Personil Rapot
Menurut penulis, pertemanan itu plot twist. Semakin lama umur temenannya, semakin recet dan bengis kata-kataan sesama membernya. Tapi gak bikin sakit hati anehnya, karna pasti tau ada sayang antar sesama. Nah, yang kita lakukan ini bukan terapi tapi boleh dicontoh karna bikin adem hati. Saling tukar pikiran tentang sifat terpuji 1 teman, yang menjadi alasan inilah kenapa kalian bisa jadi lama berteman.
2019-09-25
38 min
TAP into Greater Olean
Around the NFL: Are the Bills on the Rise? What's Going with Big Blue?
TAPinto Greater Olean reporters David Malchak and Donovan Moffat discuss their recet columns about fates of the Buffalo Bills and New York Giants. TAPinto Greater Olean's Sam Hoefling hosts.
2018-10-26
00 min
Ordinary Day Podcast
58 Ryde Lake Camp Adventures
Diane talks about her week long adventure at Ryde Lake Camp. Peit shares a story about a chicken and a bowling alley. Then the two review their recet trip with Zip Car.
2017-07-16
00 min
Nightlock: A Hunger Games Podcast
Episode 42: Make Some Friends
Since it’s award season we got a few announcements in that category, along with some other Catching Fire movie news such as new posters. A mini review of Jennifer Lawrence's most recet movie, Silver Linings Playbook is featured. Chapter 16 of Catching Fire is analyzed where we are introduced to more tributes such as Beetee and Wiress. We ask ourselves if tributes that have modified their body through surgeries are allowed enter the arena in that state, or is that considered an unfair advantage? A review of the new iOS verison of Hunger Games Adventures video game is...
2013-03-01
00 min