Categories: arts + letters

Milt Rosenberg interviews Stephen O'Shea about The Great Heresy.

Stephen O’Shea On “The Perfect Heresy”

With Stephen O'Shea

Added 8.2.19. Historian and journalist Stephen O’Shea delves with Milt into the medieval uprising in Languedoc in France’s south against the Catholic Church, by Christian Dualistic, Gnostic Cathars, or “pure ones.” O’Shea is author of a number of books, including , “The Great Heresy: The Revolutionary Life And Death Of The Medieval Cathars.” In France he studied politics and worked as a journalist and later lived in southern France to research this book.

Listen!
Milt Rosenberg interviews journalist and author Richard Miniter about the life of terrorist mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed

The Many Faces Of 9/11 Architect Khalid Sheikh Mohammed

With Richard Miniter

Added 7.12.19. The Pakistani Islamic militant who masterminded the 9/11 attack on the Twin Towers and other deadly terrorist attacks now remains in custody at Guantanamo Bay. Investigative journalist and author Richard Miniter wrote the definitive account of his life and career, titled, “Mastermind: The Many Faces Of The 9/11 Architect Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.” In this interview with Milt, Miniter shares detailed and colorful revelations about Mohammed’s life as a student in the U.S., his role in the capture of Osama bin Laden and the prevention of other planned terrorist attacks landmarks in the U.S. and abroad, and his interrogation by U.S.authorities. Miniter has worked for the Wall Street Journal and Sunday Times of London and is now the national security columnist for Forbes. His other books include “Losing bin Laden,” and “Shadow War: The Inside Story of How America Is Winning The War On Terror.”

Listen!
Milt Rosenberg and historians explore the Byzantine world

The Byzantine World

With Dean Miller, Robert Nelson

Added 5.24.19. Situated on the site of modern-day Istanbul, the city of Byzantium – also known for some time as Constantinople – was an empire which bridged antiquity and the dawn of modernity, and became the dominant economy, culture and military in Europe. Joining Milt in a closer look at the Byzantine Empire through the peregrinations of time are Dean Miller, professor emeritus of history at the University of Rochester, and Robert Nelson, a University of Chicago historian.

Listen!
Milt Rosenberg interviews John Lynn and Brian Sandberg on what makes conquerors tick

Understanding Conquerors

With John Lynn, Brian Sandberg

Added 5.17.19. With historians John Lynn of the University of Illinois and Brian Sandberg of Northern Illinois University, Milt in this vintage episode explores what drove conquerors such as Alexander the Great, Napoleon, and Hitler to do what they did. What was the role of “legacy preoccupation” in Alexander’s quests? How exactly did Hitler conceptualize his symbiosis with the body politic? These questions and much more get a lively treatment from the panel, and callers add their own theories and queries.

Listen!
Milt Rosenberg interviews three experts on the art and effect of the letter.

The Art And Effect Of The Letter, In History

With Jonathan Gross, Donna Seaman, Larry Lipking

Added 5.10.19. Before email, there was this thing called the letter. As most people born prior to the digital age likely know, for many centuries letters served not only as a means of private communication but also as a rich source of material for historians and other scholars. Though we think of letters as typically extemporaneous and personal, they could be more composed, and far-reaching. Milt in this 1997 episode delves into the subject with three experts. They start with the epic and bristling letter from Samuel Johnson to his former patron Lord Chesterfield, and then jump to other points in the historical continuum to reveal the art and effect of the letter in history.

Listen!