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If Everybody Knew

If Everybody Knew

Written by: Humanities Council of Princeton
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What’s one thing you wish everybody knew? And how could that change the world? Dexter Thomas meets with scholars, activists, and journalists from Princeton and beyond to find the conversations and ideas that might just change everything.Copyright 2023 Humanities Council of Princeton Social Sciences World
Episodes
  • …about Serbian internet slang and storybooks in the hospital (How we Talk, part 2)
    Jun 29 2022

    What if everybody knew… why a Serbian meme page and a letter that doesn't even technically exist brought people together? Or, what's actually going on (in both people's heads) when someone reads their little brother a story?

    These might seem like unrelated topics, but as our guests Ameena Faruki ’22 and Sofia Pauca ’21 walk us through their research, we'll hear about another two different ways we (try to) connect with one another, and what assumptions we might want to rethink. This is the second of a two-part series.


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    40 mins
  • … about african drums and the Loch Ness Monster (How we Talk, part 1)
    Jun 14 2022

    What if everybody knew… why a West African drummer was so serious about his European students understanding why he played? Or, why creatures like the Loch Ness Monster or Bigfoot are so important to people… who don’t even believe they exist? 

    These might seem like unrelated topics, but as our guests Allie Mangel ’22 and Lucy Ellen Dever ’22 walk us through their research, we'll hear about two different that we (try to) connect with one another, how that can go wrong, and what that means for future generations.

    This is the first of a two-part series.

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    46 mins
  • ...the bloody history behind our famous library
    Feb 21 2022

    In the early 1920s, the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company opened a massive rubber plantation in Liberia. Money from this venture quickly found its way to one of the most iconic libraries in America.

    How much money was funneled into Princeton? As we find out in this podcast, it’s not clear.

    This episode features Gregg Mitman, author of Empire of Rubber; Simon Gikandi, Chair of the English Department at Princeton; and Jon Ort, former EIC of the Daily Princetonian.

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    45 mins
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