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Stuff You Missed in History Class

By HowStuffWorks.com

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Podcast Description

Want to know more about Operation Mincemeat? How about Clybourne Park? Join Deblina and Sarah as they explore some of history's most fascinating people and events in the Stuff You Missed in History Class, courtesy of HowStuffWorks.com.

Customer Reviews

History as seen from the back of the class

All popularization involves simplification, but Stuff You Missed in History Class often fails to observe the crucial distinction between simplifying the complex and merely making stuff up on the fly. At best the result is aimless fluff, at worst it’s like listening to a particularly bizarre Grampa Simpson monologue, where the most wildly speculative theories, fanciful legends, and highly debatable points are presented with 100% confidence as “the way it really happened,” because, like, we read it somewhere on the Internet and stuff. Take for example the episode on the Ancient Greeks (8/20/2008), which is so off-the-charts inaccurate that you must seriously wonder if it’s all meant as a spoof. The loud “THUD” that your neighbors will hear is the sound of your jaw dropping to the floor when you realize that the podcast/ web page’s so-called History Editor (who apparently holds a Master of Arts degree from the University of G—) believes that the Dark Ages and the Renaissance primarily took place in Britain [sic], or when you realize that virtually everything reported by the Senior Writer, after having “done some research” on the topic, constitutes a veritable smorgasbord of historical inaccuracy (e.g. that in Classical Greece “once separate city-states united into a democratic republic,” that Plato, Homer, Pythagoras, and the gang were all frat brothers at the University of Egypt around 600 BCE or whenever, that 19th-century Europe had a sizeable slave population, etc. etc.). This is not a matter of a few minor inaccuracies; rather, it demonstrates a thoroughly unprofessional failure to understand history and the basics of information gathering, making the presenters’ unerringly self-assured tone all the more grating. This could have been an interesting podcast, but all in all, the reason you missed this stuff in history class is because your teacher was busy teaching, you know, actual history. Thankfully for the history buffs, there are many superior podcasts on history out there that provide in-depth coverage or discussion: The History of Rome, BBC History Magazine, The Thomas Jefferson Hour, 12 Byzantine Rulers, and so forth – seek and ye shall find.

DRITBRA!!!

Anbefales alle nysgjerrige folk! Godt presentert og interessante temaer! Prøv den!!!

Genialt!

Fantastisk podcast om du er glad i historie. Lærer noe nytt hver gang.

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