What's Old is News

Women United

45 min · 5. Dez. 2025
Episode Women United Cover

Beschreibung

This week Sean Graham talks with Peggy Nash, one of the co-authors of Women United: Stories of Women's Struggles for Equality in the Canadian Auto Workers Union. [https://btlbooks.com/book/women-united] They discuss women's contributions to the union in its early years, how negotiating priorities were shaped, and the Second World War's influence on the labour movement. They also chat about the impact of the Autopact and free trade on labour, women's leadership in the modern labour movement, and what it's like to be in the room negotiating against an employer. Historical Headline of the Week René Morisette, "Unionization in Canada, 1981 to 2022 [https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/36-28-0001/2022011/article/00001-eng.htm]," Stats Canada, November 23, 2022.

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Alle Folgen

81 Folgen

Episode Colonial Newspapers Cover

Colonial Newspapers

Sean Graham talks with Shelisa Klassen, author of Imprinting Empire: Land and Settler Colonialism in Manitoba Newspapers [https://uofmpress.ca/books/imprinting-empire]. They talk about late 19th century Manitoba newspapers, the audiences both in Manitoba and the rest of Canada, and how the press framed colonial practices. They also discuss how newspapers fit into other commercial projects, what information was included and what was intentionally omitted, and the legacy of the era's newspapers. Historical Headline of the Week Clare Hennig and Jean Paetkau, "Digital archive of old B.C. textbooks highlights 'constant dehumanizing of Indigenous people [https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/uvic-digitizing-old-b-c-textbooks-with-indigenous-curriculum-beyond-beads-bannock-1.4800944],' CBC.ca, September 4, 2018.

22. Juni 202641 min
Episode Common Sense Cover

Common Sense

This week, Sean Graham talks with Michael North, author of Making Common Sense: On the Construction of the Obvious from Antiquity to AI. [https://www.sup.org/books/theory-and-philosophy/making-common-sense] They talk about what counts as 'common' sense, its relation to the 5 senses, and how that understanding shaped perceptions of common sense. They then get into a discussion about the modern understanding of common sense, the difference between that and reason, and how algorithms and AI are shaping our understanding of what counts as 'common' sense. Historical Headline of the Week Jo Marchant, "The American Revolution's Overlooked Influence? Physics. How 'Common Sense' Spelled Out Astronomical Expectations for a New Nation," [https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/american-revolution-overlooked-influence-physics-thomas-paine-common-sense-spelled-out-astronomical-expectations-new-nation-180988795/] Smithsonian Magazine, Summer 2026.

8. Juni 202638 min
Episode The Governors General Cover

The Governors General

This week Sean Graham talks with John Fraser, author of The Governors General: An Intimate History of Canada's Highest Office [https://sutherlandhousebooks.com/product/the-governors-general/]. They talk about John's experiences meeting all the Canadian-born Governors General, how personality shapes the office, and the role's political limits. They also discuss the people who held the office, how they managed the position's responsibilities, and what purpose the monarch's representative in Canada has in the 21st century. Historical Headline of the Week John Fraser, "Julie Payette's disastrous reign as Governor General: 'Act of perpetual petulance, [https://nationalpost.com/feature/astronaut-julie-payette-flamed-out-as-governor-general]'" National Post, April 2, 2026.

1. Juni 202641 min