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Reckoning with Jason Herbert

Reckoning with Jason Herbert

Written by: Jason Herbert
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About this listen

Reckoning with Jason Herbert is a long-form conversation podcast about history, the outdoors, and the stories that shape who we are.


Each episode features historians, writers, scientists, and thinkers in wide-ranging conversations about wild places, forgotten pasts, cultural memory, and the forces—human and natural—that continue to shape our lives.


This isn’t a news cycle show or a debate podcast. It’s a space for reflection, curiosity, and serious conversation—meant to be listened to slowly.


If you’re interested in history beyond textbooks, the outdoors beyond recreation, and stories that linger long after they’re told, this show is for you.

© 2026 Reckoning with Jason Herbert
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Episodes
  • Purple Rain and Prince’s Minneapolis with Rashad Shabazz
    Feb 19 2026

    In this episode, I sit down with cultural geographer Rashad Shabazz to dissect the 1984 classic starring Prince — and ask the uncomfortable questions.

    Is The Kid a tortured genius… or a young man replaying generational trauma?
    Is the final performance redemption — or dominance?
    And what does Minneapolis represent in a film about Black masculinity, ambition, and control?

    We unpack race, space, violence, desire, artistic genius, and the myth of upward mobility — all through the lens of one of the most iconic soundtracks of the 1980s.

    This is Purple Rain as you’ve never heard it discussed before.

    🎧 Press play.

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    1 hr and 43 mins
  • Episode 183: Heather Cox Richardson on Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter
    1 hr and 46 mins
  • Episode 182: Contagion of Liberty: Smallpox, Freedom, and America's First Culture War with Andrew Wehrman
    Feb 9 2026

    In this episode of Reckoning, historian Andrew Wehrman, author of Contagion of Liberty, explores how smallpox and inoculation shaped the American founding—and ignited some of the earliest debates over liberty, risk, and public health.

    Long before COVID-19, Americans wrestled with questions of bodily autonomy, religious belief, communal obligation, and government authority, all in the shadow of a deadly disease and without modern medical knowledge. From local resistance to inoculation to George Washington’s controversial decision to mandate it in the Continental Army, this conversation places early American public health in its full moral and political context.

    By looking closely at how Americans responded to smallpox, this episode shows why vaccine controversy is not a modern anomaly—but a recurring feature of American life—and what our past can (and cannot) teach us about navigating public health crises today.

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    1 hr and 11 mins
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