New Books in NYC History (NBN) — The Gotham Center for New York City History

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New Books in NYC History (NBN)

A Podcast Featuring Scholars Talking about Recent Work in New York City History

Presented
with the
New Books Network

 

Marc Aronson explains how Manhattan has put different kinds of people close to each other--fostering curiosity, conflict and new cultural hybrids.

Marc Aronson, Four Streets and a Square
Interviewed by Robert W. Snyder
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Jessica DuLong tells the forgotten story of the seaborne evacuation of lower Manhattan on September 11, 2001

Jessica DuLong, Saved at the Seawall
Interviewed by Robert W. Snyder
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Van Gosse offers a new perspective of the formative era of American democracy from the Constitution's ratification through Abraham Lincoln's election, chronicling the rise of an organized, visible black politics

Van Gosse, The First Reconstruction
Interviewed by Jessica Georges
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Frederick M. Binder, David M. Reimers, and Robert W. Snyder cover the almost 500 years of New York City’s story of cultural diversity, political conflict, economic dynamism and unmatched human diversity

Frederick M. Binder, David M. Reimers, and Robert W. Snyder, All the Nations Under Heaven
Interviewed by Bruce Cory
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Adam Hochschild explores the life and the unlikely marriage of socialist women’s rights and labor advocate, Rose Pastor Stokes, and the great hopes of the Progressive Era in New York City

Adam Hochschild, Rebel Cinderella
Interviewed by Robert W. Snyder
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Kara Murphy Schlichting explores how local planning initiatives, waterfront park building, the natural environment, and a growing leisure economy on Manhattan’s periphery had on the regional development of New York City

Kara Murphy Schlichtling, New York Recentered
Interviewed by Garrett Reed Gutierrez
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Jim Mackin introduces former residents of a culturally and politically fertile slice of Manhattan from West 90s to 125th Street, a roster that will astonish even long-time residents of the area

Jim Mackin, Notable New Yorkers of Manhattan's Upper West Side
Interviewed by Robert W. Snyder
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Matthew Spady tells us how the Audubon homestead went from woodlands area to a multi-ethnic big-city neighborhood

Matthew Spady, The Neighborhood Manhattan Forgot
Interviewed by Robert W. Snyder
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Deborah Dash Moore

talks about one of the city’s most important ethnic and religious groups: the Jewish immigrants who, among other things, shaped popular culture in music, theater, and the arts, and influenced the city, state, and nation with a new wave of social activism

Deborah Dash Moore, Jewish New York: The Remarkable Story of a City and a People
Interviewed by David O. Monda
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Sam Roberts tells the story of the city through bricks, glass, wood, and mortar, revealing why and how it evolved into the nation’s biggest and most influential metropolis

Sam Roberts, A History of New York in 27 Buildings
Interviewed by David O. Monda
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Christopher Bonanos talks about the iconic NYC

newspaper and street photographer ‘

Weegee’

Christopher Bonanos, Flash
Interviewed by Robert W. Snyder
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Richard Haw talks about the

oddball John Roebling, who engineered the Brooklyn Bridge

a marvel of stability at a time when suspension bridges routinely fell down

Richard Haw, Engineering America
Interviewed by Beth Harpaz
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Jeanne Theoharis talks about Jim Crow in NYC, and her new volume on segregation in the North, co-edited with Brian Purnell

Jeanne Theoharis, co-editor, The Strange Careers of the Jim Crow North
Interviewed by Beth Harpaz
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Lisandro Pérez talks about how NYC became the headquarters of Cuban émigré life in America, until the Miami Exodus of 1960 — from wealthy sugar plantation owners to working-class cigar makers and leaders of the fight against Spanish colonialism

Lisandro Perez, Sugar, Cigars, and Revolution
Interviewed by Beth Harpaz

Stephanie Azzarone lifts Riverside Park and its surroundings from the shadows and sheds light on its architectural and natural beauty.

Stephanie Azzarone, Heaven on the Hudson
Interviewed by Robert W. Snyder
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Larry Kirwan probes the griefs, trauma and resilience of Irish American New Yorkers wresting with the deaths and aftershocks of that terrible day

Larry Kirwan, Rockaway Blue: A Novel
Interviewed by Robert W. Snyder
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Edgardo Meléndez examines the activities and ideals of Puerto Rican revolutionary exiles in New York City at the end of the nineteenth century

Edgardo Meléndez, Patria
Interviewed by Jesse Hoffnung-Garskoff
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Rose Muzio analyzes how structural and historical factors influenced young Puerto Ricans to reject mainstream ideas about political incorporation and join others in struggles against perceived injustices

Rose Muzio, Radical Imagination, Radical Humanity
Interviewed by David Monda
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Bruce D. Haynes explores the historical and social forces that transformed Harlem over the past century through the story of one Harlem family over three generations

Bruce D. Haynes, Down the Up Staircase
Interviewed by Tyesha Maddox
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Ariella Rotramel discusses the activism of working-class women of color around labor, environmentalism, housing, and other non-feminist-specific agendas

Ariella Rotramel, Pushing Back Women of Color–Led Grassroots Activism in New York City
Interviewed by Hongdeng Gao
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Philip Mark Plotch talks about the nearly century-long stops and starts to the building of the Second Avenue line, and the challenges, problems, and triumphs of the NYC

subway system

Philip M. Plotch, Last Subway
Interviewed by Robert W. Snyder
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Jesse Hoffnung-Garskof talks about the

Cubans and Puerto Ricans of African descent who settled in NYC during the late 19th c. and

built a political network that championed revolution, and racial and social justice, back home

Jesse Hoffnung-Garskof, Racial Migrations
Interviewed by Tyesha Maddox
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Johanna Fernandez talks about the radical Puerto Rican group of the 1960s, which consciously fashioned itself after the Black Panther Party, and took aim at NYC’s inequalities

Johanna Fernandez, The Young Lords
Interviewed by Beth Harpaz
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Vincent DiGirolamo talks about the young boys who served as the backbone of newspaper labor in NYC and beyond for much of American history

Vincent DiGirolamo, Crying the News
Interviewed by Beth Harpaz
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Elizabeth Macaulay-Lewis talks about the Greco-Roman influence of buildings, monuments and public spaces in NYC, and her new volume, co-edited by

Matthew McGowan

Elizabeth Macaulay-Lewis, co-editor, Classical New York
Interviewed by Beth Harpaz
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Clarence Taylor, dean of the history of the civil rights movement in NYC, looks at black resistance to police brutality and efforts to hold the NYPD accountable since the late 1930s

Clarence Taylor, Fight the Power
Interviewed by Beth Harpaz
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Evan Friss talks about how the bicycle shaped NYC’s social, economic, and cultural development, and the struggle between riders, pedestrians and drivers over transportation, leisure, and public space

Evan Friss, On Bicycles
Interviewed by Kara Schlichting
 
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