Teaching Hard History
A podcast by Learning for Justice
80 Episoade
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Ten More … Film and the History of Slavery
Publicat: 08.10.2025 -
Film and the History of Slavery
Publicat: 17.09.2025 -
Diverse Experience of the Enslaved
Publicat: 02.09.2025 -
Resistance Means More Than Rebellion
Publicat: 14.08.2025 -
In the Footsteps of Others: Process Drama
Publicat: 31.07.2025 -
Doing the Work of Teaching Hard History
Publicat: 22.07.2025 -
Slavery and the Northern Economy
Publicat: 10.07.2025 -
Slavery and the Civil War, Part 2
Publicat: 26.06.2025 -
Slavery and the Civil War, Part 1
Publicat: 19.06.2025 -
Why Hard History Matters: Addressing the Legacy of Jim Crow – w/ Rep. Hakeem Jeffries
Publicat: 25.05.2022 -
Criminalizing Blackness: Prisons, Police and Jim Crow – w/ Robert T. Chase and Brandon T. Jett
Publicat: 16.05.2022 -
Music Reconstructed: Lara Downes’ Classical Perspective on Jim Crow – w/ Charles L. Hughes
Publicat: 26.04.2022 -
Music Reconstructed: Adia Victoria and the Landscape of the Blues – w/ Charles L. Hughes
Publicat: 12.04.2022 -
Black Political Thought – w/ Minkah Makalani
Publicat: 08.04.2022 -
Music Reconstructed: Dom Flemons, Black Cowboys and the American West – w/ Charles L. Hughes
Publicat: 18.03.2022 -
Medical Racism: A Legacy of Malpractice – w/ Deirdre Cooper Owens
Publicat: 17.03.2022 -
Music Reconstructed: Jason Moran, Jazz and the Harlem Hellfighters – w/ Charles L. Hughes
Publicat: 23.02.2022 -
The Harlem Renaissance: Restructuring, Rebirth and Reckoning – w/ Julie Buckner Armstrong
Publicat: 17.02.2022 -
Changing the Game: Sports in the Jim Crow Era – w/ Derrick E. White and Louis Moore
Publicat: 24.01.2022 -
Changing the Game: Sports in the Jim Crow Era – w/ Derrick E. White and Louis Moore
Publicat: 22.01.2022
From Learning for Justice and host Hasan Kwame Jeffries, Ph.D., Teaching Hard History brings us the crucial history we should have learned through the voices of leading scholars and educators. The series, which includes four seasons that originally aired from 2018 to 2022, begins with the long and brutal legacy of slavery and reaches through the victories of and violent responses to the Civil Rights Movement and Black Americans’ experiences during the Jim Crow era to the issues we face today. Join us as we relaunch this podcast series, highlighting an episode each week and including a new resource page with key points from the conversation, resources and connections for building learning experiences.
