Podcast - The Endless Knot

Informações:

Sinopse

History, language, etymology, science, literature, and education -- and the strange and surprising connections between all of them.

Episódios

  • Episode 105: Dionysus, Translation, & Queering Greek Drama with Emma Pauly

    03/05/2022 Duração: 01h12min

    This episode we have a fascinating conversation with classicist, dramatug, and translator Emma Pauly about all things Dionysian, Greek tragedy, and their translation of Euripides’ Bacchae. We explore how Emma brings their experience with acting and directing to translating and analyzing Greek literature, and how our understanding of the past changes as we develop our understanding of gender and sexuality.Emma’s websiteBacchae recordingEmma’s translation of the seventh Homeric Hymn to DionysusTwitterInstagramTranscript of this episodeThis episode on YouTubeOur Patreon pageRedbubble storeThis podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International LicenseThe Endless Knot RSS

  • Episode 104: Words the Vikings Gave Us, with Grace Tierney

    12/04/2022 Duração: 58min

    It’s time for some Old Norse, sagas, and daring Viking explorers! In this episode we talk to author Grace Tierney about her newest book, Words the Vikings Gave Us. We had a ton of fun in this conversation, and we’re sure you will too!Grace Tierney’s blog, WordfooleryOur video on Runes, and NativLang’s matching videoTranscript of this episodeThis episode on YouTubeOur Patreon pageRedbubble storeThis podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International LicenseThe Endless Knot RSS

  • Bonus: Karaoke April Fools!

    01/04/2022 Duração: 50min

    It’s April Fool’s Day, and time for the annual Podcast Switcheroo, where podcasters trade episodes to give their audience something a little different and introduce them to a new show. This year we’ve got an episode from “The Greatest Song Ever Sung (Poorly)”, all about the joys and embarrassments of singing karaoke. IN this episode hosts Adam Wainwright and Ed Cunard discuss questions like is a karaoke performance a cover song? What do musicians have to say about karaoke? What are the barriers to making music, and creativity in general? They also talk to punk and folk singer-songwriter Frank Turner about some of his most memorable karaoke experiences and about how he feels about cover songs, singalongs at concerts, and karaoke versions of his songs. After you’ve listened to this, why not add them to your subscriptions? Thanks to Moxy from “Your Brain on Facts” for organizing this event, and happy April Fool’s Day to everyone!Our Patreon pageRedbubble storeThis podcast is licensed under a Creative Commo

  • Episode 103: Potatoes for Saint Patrick

    15/03/2022 Duração: 01h18min

    Happy Saint Patrick’s Day! In this episode we talk about the saint’s history, then dig into the potato — its etymology, its history, and how it’s changed the world. With some tangents about batteries, famines, and travel in the Roman world.Old Potato CocktailIrish Maid CocktailPotato battery videoMonster videoTalking Turkey, episode 24Season to Taste, episode 35ORBISArticle about Irish Famine Relief by the Choctaw NationTranscript of this episodeThis episode on YouTubeOur Patreon pageRedbubble storeThis podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International LicenseThe Endless Knot RSS

  • Episode 102: Baking Greek Bread, with Josh Nudell

    22/02/2022 Duração: 01h08min

    We’re talking about bread again! This time, about ancient Greek bread — its vocabulary, the many types of bread and how they were made, and the economic aspects of bread production. Josh shares his practical experiences of baking along with his research into the classical Greek world.Josh Nudell’s websiteJosh on Twitter: @jpnudellTavola MediterraneaOur previous episode on bread, “Loaf”Thank you to Emma Pauly for editing and transcribing this episode.Transcript of this episodeThis episode on YouTubeOur Patreon pageRedbubble storeThis podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International LicenseThe Endless Knot RSS

  • Episode 101: Not Your Average Podcast

    31/01/2022 Duração: 01h46min

    We start off the new year with a three-part discussion of statistics, insurance, stocks, astrologers, coffee, and more. We also trace some of the vocabulary that has come to English from Arabic, along with important mathematical concepts.Podcast recommendation: Khameleon Classics Cocktail: The Revolver Average Part 1 Average Part 2 Average Part 3 Ep 31 CreateICGEp 39 From Fossil Hunters to Mammoth CheeseEp 32 Ariadne’s Cluevideo “How Do We Perceive a Poem?”Ripat, Pauline. “Expelling Misconceptions: Astrologers At Rome.” Classical Philology, vol. 106, no. 2, The University of Chicago Press, 2011, pp. 115–54, https://doi.org/10.1086/659835Transcript of this episodeThis episode on YouTubeOur Patreon pageRedbubble storeThis podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International LicenseThe Endless Knot RSS

  • Episode 100: Celebrating Connections

    09/12/2021 Duração: 01h13min

    Our hundredth episode! We’re celebrating reaching three digits — and more than 6 years — with a whole bunch of our podcasting friends! These are just some of the amazing creators who make the independent podcasting world so wonderful, and we’re very happy to be connected to them all. Please check out their shows at the links below. We also give you a brief “State of the Pod” update. Thank you to everyone who’s been with us so far, and here’s to the next century (of episodes)!Thank you to Christine Couisineau for help editing and transcribing this episode.The Kir Royale cocktailSandman Stories PresentsThe Partial HistoriansAccentricity PodcastLexitecture PodcastThe History of EnglishPontifacts PodcastBecause LanguageYour Brain on FactsBunny Trails PodcastThe Spouter Inn PodcastGrammar Girl PodcastWonders of the World PodcastLet’s Talk about Myths, Baby PodcastLingthusiasm PodcastFootnoting History The Vocal Fries PodcastTranscript of this episodeThis episode on YouTubeOur Patreon pageRedbubble storeThis podcas

  • Episode 99: Heavy Metal Music and Antiquity, with Jeremy Swist

    15/11/2021 Duração: 01h19min

    We talked to Jeremy Swist about his work on the reception of antiquity in heavy metal music. He discussed the ways the genre looks to the past for stories and imagery, and the many fantastic songs and albums that have been produced from this mix. We also talked about the problems with racism and white nationalism that can plague the intersection of the ancient world and metal music. Playlist of the songs Jeremy mentionedPour Forth Surquidous track@MetalClassicistHeavy Metal and the Ancient World on FacebookJeremy’s blogMetal-archives.comTranscript of this episodeThis episode on YouTubeOur Patreon pageRedbubble storeThis podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International LicenseThe Endless Knot RSS

  • Episode 98: The Monster Episode of Monsters

    27/10/2021 Duração: 02h12min

    It’s Halloween, and the monsters are out! In this episode we tackle Monster Theory (as formulated by J.J. Cohen) , examine the linguistic and cultural origins of a range of Classical and classic movie monsters, look at how they connect to the history of currency and money, and explore the intersections of monsters and the New Woman. We also sample a beautiful cocktail from the upcoming cocktail book Nectar of the Gods by Liv Albert from “Let’s Talk about Myths, Baby”. Thank you, Liv!The Monster videoMonster Theory by J.J. CohenTracking Classical Monsters in Popular Culture by Liz GloynOur podcast episode interviewing Dr. GloynHorace Odes 1.37Hesiod passage about Medusa is Theogony 270ff; more info about Medusa hereOvid passage about Medusa is Metamorphoses 4.753ffGeneral sources for this episodeTranscript of this episodeThis episode on YouTubeOur Patreon pageRedbubble storeThis podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International LicenseThe Endless Knot RSS

  • Episode 97: Aegyptiaca Romana, with Bet Hucks

    28/09/2021 Duração: 55min

    We speak to Bet Hucks about Roman importation and love of Egyptian art and other cultural material, the importance of thinking about material remains in assemblages and considering the contexts in which they were displayed, and some innovative ways of bringing the physical experiences of the past to modern audiences. Oh, and also, crocodiles! Bet’s Twitter: @RomanAegyptiacaBet on academia.eduThanks to Emma Pauly for editing and transcription of this episode.Transcript of this episodeThis episode on YouTubeOur Patreon pageRedbubble storeThis podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International LicenseThe Endless Knot RSS

  • Episode 96: What's the Earliest English Word?

    06/09/2021 Duração: 01h25min

    What do you think the earliest English word was? How could we possibly look for such a thing, and what do the possible options tell us about early English history and the movement of peoples in the early medieval period? We tackle these questions, in an episode about Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Frisians, Celts, Tacitus, Bede, and more.Reminder: Mark will be running another session of his Speakeasy seminar course, The Origins of English: Learning to Think Like an Etymologist, which is open to anyone who’s interested. Registration is now open at Speakeasy.com for the session running on Sunday afternoons (Eastern time) from September 12th October 3rd. Recipe for Old English cocktailEarliest English Word videoJabzy’s Anglo-Saxon Invasion videoThe Early Greek Alphabets: Origin, Diffusion, chpt 4 by Rosalind ThomasC. Krebs, A MOST DANGEROUS BOOK: TACITUS’ GERMANIA FROM THE ROMAN EMPIRE TO THE THIRD REICH. London: W.W.Norton & Co., 2011. Other sourcesWhy do Poles call Italy WŁOCHY? (video)Bonus episode about the term

  • Episode 95: Reckonings, with Stephen Chrisomalis

    17/08/2021 Duração: 01h13min

    It’s time for a reckoning! Or, to be more accurate, a number of reckonings. We talk to Dr. Stephen Chrisomalis, a linguistic anthropologist who specializes in the anthropology of mathematics and the interaction of language, cognition, and culture, about his new book Reckonings. It’s a fascinating discussion of how we write and represent numbers, and how that’s changed over the years. Why don’t we use Roman numerals any more? It’s more complicated than you might think…Announcement: Mark will be running another session of his Speakeasy seminar course, The Origins of English: Learning to Think Like an Etymologist, which is open to anyone who’s interested. Registration is now open at Speakeasy.com for the session running on Sunday afternoons (Eastern time) from September 12th October 3rd. Glossographia (blog)Twitter: @schrisomalis Wayne State University faculty pageReckonings webpage Transcript of this episodeThis episode on YouTubeOur Patreon pageRedbubble storeThis podcast is licensed under a Creative Comm

  • Episode 94: Catullus & Shibari, with Isobel Williams

    27/07/2021 Duração: 01h22min

    We talked to Isobel Williams about her fascinating and illuminating new translation of selected poems of Catullus, illustrated with her drawings of the Japanese art of rope binding, shibari. Our discussion ranges over the connections between the world of shibari and the emotional struggles depicted in Catullus’s poetry, the way translation and learning Latin can feel like being tied up in, and untangling, knots, and much more.Content Note: fetish, sex, brief mention of sexual violence, discussion of enslavement and use of slavery as metaphorBlog about drawing shibari (Japanese rope bondage): Boulevardisme Straight blog about drawing: Drawing from an uncomfortable position Website: Isobel Williams Twitter: @otium_CatulleInstagram: @isobelwilliams2525From Isobel: “For the online book launch, I compiled a video (>20 minutes) of self and others reading in Latin and English from the book. It starts with Sappho in ancient Greek and ends with Shakespeare, to show the continuity Sappho -> Catullus -> Ovid -&

  • Episode 93: The Americano, the Negroni, America, and Rome

    05/07/2021 Duração: 56min

    A day after Independence Day in the US, we investigate the history of the name “America” and two related cocktails, with some side trips into the sack of Rome in 410 CE and the use of the Fall of Rome as a historical parallel for the United States. This episode completes our mini series on country names, in the season of national holidays in north America. Cocktails: Americano & NegroniRutilius Namatianus, De Reditu Suo"The Fall of Ancient Rome and Modern U.S. Immigration: Historical Model or Political Football?" Frank Argote-Freyre and Christopher M. Bellitto. The Historian Vol. 74, No. 4 (WINTER 2012), pp. 789-811Transcript of this episodeThis episode on YouTubeOur Patreon pageRedbubble storeThis podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International LicenseThe Endless Knot RSS

  • Episode 92: Canuck, and Re-Thinking Canada's Story

    28/06/2021 Duração: 01h17min

    This episode is being released for Canada Day, but it’s not a celebration. This year, even more than most, we feel that this day needs to be one of reckoning with our past and trying to make a better present and future. So we talk about the history of the word Canuck and the various stories that Canadians tell themselves about their county, and we also discuss the role of Classics in the early history of the colonial project in Canada, as well as how to think about Classics today in relation to Indigenous issues. And then we finish with some quick etymologies of uniquely Canadian words and phrases. Content note: there is brief mention of residential schools and discussion of historical racism.Le Canuck Cocktail Jacques Cartier Heritage MinuteMinute Women podcastDictionary of Canadianisms on Historical PrinciplesBrill’s Companion to Classics in the Early AmericasZachary Yuzwa on TwitterRobinson-Huron Treaty lawsuitMuskoka chairBeavertailsNanaimo barsFiddleheadsSpilePorketta Bingo“Only in Canada, You Say?” by K

  • Episode 91: Roman Gardens, with Victoria Austen

    25/05/2021 Duração: 01h02min

    We talk to Dr. Victoria Austen about Roman gardens. What defines a garden? Where were the gardens at Rome, and what were they for? How did Romans think about gardens and gardening, and what roles did they play in literature, philosophy, and the public relations efforts of emperors? @Vicky_AustenTranscript of this episodeThis episode on YouTubeOur Patreon pageRedbubble storeThis podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International LicenseThe Endless Knot RSS

  • Episode 90: Unrolling Books and Evolving Words

    26/04/2021 Duração: 01h18min

    We talk about the history of the book, the reading habits of the ancient Romans, the pliability of sheep skins, and the mechanisms of semantic change that cause words to evolve over time. Oh, and we discuss Charles Darwin’s own language for his new theory."Codex Cocktail" was created for us by Ed Bedford — recipe hereLiber Adest newsletterMcCutcheon, R. W. “Silent Reading in Antiquity and the Future History of the Book.” Book History, vol. 18, 2015, pp. 1–32., www.jstor.org/stable/43956366“In Ancient Rome” by Joseph Howley, in Further Reading, edited by Matthew Rubery and Leah Price. 2020.Erasmus Darwin videoTranscript of this episodeThis episode on YouTubeOur Patreon pageRedbubble storeThis podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International LicenseThe Endless Knot RSS

  • Switcheroo 2021!

    01/04/2021 Duração: 38min

    This year for April Fool's Day we're taking part in a podcast switcheroo where podcasters are trading episodes to introduce their audiences to other podcasts they think you might enjoy. So we're having the great folks from Bunny Trails, Shauna and Dan, showcase one of their episodes, about the phrase “Queen Bee”.Bunny Trails PodcastShownotes for this episode (including transcript)Our Patreon pageThis podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International LicenseThe Endless Knot RSS

  • Episode 89: Horses in Antiquity, with Carolyn Willekes

    17/03/2021 Duração: 01h18min

    We speak to Dr. Carolyn Willekes about horses in antiquity: their development and domestication, their use in warfare, their training and breeding, and her many adventures riding horses across Greece, Turkey, Mongolia, and Canada. The Horse in the Ancient World: From Bucephalus to the HippodromeGreek Warriors: Hoplites and HeroesTranscript of this episodeThis episode on YouTubeOur Patreon pageThis podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International LicenseThe Endless Knot RSS

  • Announcement: Online Course

    27/02/2021 Duração: 01min

    Aven: Hi everyone. This isn't a regular episode of the Endless Knot podcast. Just a quick announcement. Mark: I wanted to let you all know about something new that I'm doing: an online seminar series. It's basically a short course open to anyone, on the Speakeasy platform.  The title is: "The origins of English: learning to think like an etymologist" and it's going to be four one-hour classes on zoom, in which, through a series of linguistic puzzles, we will follow in the footsteps of etymologists and historical linguists to reconstruct the relationships between languages and long forgotten roots of English words.The class is limited to 12 people and starts on Thursday, March 4th, at 7:00 PM eastern time, running on the three following Thursdays at the same time. If you're interested, you can go to our website at alliterative.net, and there's a link to the Speakeasy page, where you can buy a ticket.Or if you'd like to take part, but the timing doesn't work for you, you can leave Speakeasy a message about

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