The World in Time

Adam Hochschild

Friday, October 14, 2022

Photo showing two young girls on roller skates wearing sashes that read, “Don’t Be a Scab.”

Strike sympathizers, c. 1915. Photograph by Bain News Service. Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.

“If there was one thing that I would want people to take away from American Midnight,” Adam Hochschild says on this episode of The World in Time, “it’s the idea that democracy, despite all the different checks and balances and the separation of powers and whatnot written into our Constitution more than two hundred years ago, is fragile. It can easily be shattered and broken. It can easily be threatened.” And during the stretch of time covered in his latest book, which spans World War I and takes place on the American home front, “I really think a lot of the basic democratic freedoms that we take for granted in this country we lost during that period.”

 

This week on the podcast, Lewis H. Lapham speaks with Adam Hochschild, author of American Midnight: The Great War, a Violent Peace, and Democracy’s Forgotten Crisis, about civil liberties, strikes, and Emma Goldman, among other subjects.

 

Thanks to our generous donors. Lead support for this podcast has been provided by Elizabeth “Lisette” Prince. Additional support was provided by James J. “Jimmy” Coleman Jr.

Discussed in this episode

More Podcasts

January 29, 2021

The World in Time:

Michael J. Sandel

Lewis H. Lapham speaks with the author of The Tyranny of Merit: What’s Become of the Common Good? More

July 24, 2020

The World in Time:

Tracy Campbell

Lewis H. Lapham speaks with the author of The Year of Peril: America in 1942. More

August 20, 2021

The World in Time:

Simon Winchester

Lewis H. Lapham speaks with the author of Land: How the Hunger for Ownership Shaped the Modern World. More

May 17, 2019

The World in Time:

Nigel Hamilton

Lewis H. Lapham talks with the author of War and Peace: FDR’s Final Odyssey: D-Day to Yalta, 1943–1945. More

April 28, 2017

The World in Time:

John Micklethwait

Lewis Lapham talks to John Micklethwait about rethinking the machinery of the state in the twenty-first century. More

The Cantino planisphere, made by an anonymous cartographer in 1502, shows the world as it was understood by Europeans after their great explorations at the end of the fifteenth century.

May 26, 2017

The World in Time:

Ian Mortimer

Lewis Lapham talks with Ian Mortimer about the past millennium of human innovation. More