Christine Caccipuoti

 

Podcaster - Historian - Writer - Performer

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    #PodcastingHistory 8: Cemeteries: Washington Park Cemetery and Early 20th-Century Atlanta
    Christine Caccipuoti
    • May 28, 2018
    • 8 min

    #PodcastingHistory 8: Cemeteries: Washington Park Cemetery and Early 20th-Century Atlanta

    When it came to choosing the final entry for #PodcastingHistory (for now!) I knew it needed to go to the person who started me on the podcasting path, Elizabeth Keohane-Burbridge. So please, welcome her and enjoy her discussion about researching and creating the Footnoting History episode, "Cemeteries: Washington Park Cemetery and Early 20th-Century Atlanta": Hello and welcome to Christine’s blog and my contribution to her series on #PodcastingHistory. I am Elizabeth Keohane-
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    #PodcastingHistory 7: Wonder Woman
    Christine Caccipuoti
    • May 14, 2018
    • 4 min

    #PodcastingHistory 7: Wonder Woman

    And now for something moderately different... In #PodcastingHistory 7 we broaden our horizons with an entry from Darrin Sunstrum, who co-hosts MythTake with Alison Innes. Enjoy this discussion of the motivation behind exploring ancient myths, with a focus on their episode, "Wonder Woman": Hello there everyone! I’ve been asked to write a few thoughts about the MythTake podcast. As educators and classicists, we were always ‘talking shop’ and bemoaning the fact that we couldn’t
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    #PodcastingHistory 5: A Re-examination of Cavalry in the First World War
    Christine Caccipuoti
    • Apr 16, 2018
    • 5 min

    #PodcastingHistory 5: A Re-examination of Cavalry in the First World War

    #PodcastingHistory 5 is here! This time, I get to share a post with you from Wesley Livesay of The History of the Great War podcast. Here, he discusses his process for creating "A Re-examination of Cavalry in the First World War, Part I", the first episode in his series on the British cavalry's contributions to World War One: Unlike some of the other podcasts which you may have read about during the #PodcastingHistory series, my show is narrative and chronological. This mean
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    #PodcastingHistory 4: Jerusalem
    Christine Caccipuoti
    • Apr 2, 2018
    • 4 min

    #PodcastingHistory 4: Jerusalem

    Thank you to everyone who has been reading and sharing #PocastingHistory! For this installment I get to hand the blog over to Ali A. Olomi of Head on History. Find out how a modern political decision resulted in an episode covering the complex history of one of the world's most famous cities in this entry about his episode, "Jerusalem": I tell my students that history is more than a recollection of the past, but a lens to analyze the present—partly to get the STEM students to
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    #PodcastingHistory 3: To See the Mongols 4: A William Leaves Town
    Christine Caccipuoti
    • Mar 19, 2018
    • 5 min

    #PodcastingHistory 3: To See the Mongols 4: A William Leaves Town

    Welcome to Guest Post 3 of #PodcastingHistory! This week I get to hand this blog over to Devon Field, creator and host of The Human Circus, a podcast dedicated to journeys in the medieval world. In this post, Devon takes us through the process of creating his episode "To See the Mongols 4: A William Leaves Town", and as a result we get to travel with his subject, Friar William, from Europe to visit the Mongols: When I prepare a podcast episode, I’m preparing to tell a story.
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    #PodcastingHistory 2: A Changeling or His Wife? The Brutal Murder of Bridget Cleary
    Christine Caccipuoti
    • Mar 5, 2018
    • 6 min

    #PodcastingHistory 2: A Changeling or His Wife? The Brutal Murder of Bridget Cleary

    Welcome to Guest Post 2 of #PodcastingHistory where historians take turns sharing their experiences creating a specific episode of their podcast. Today I have the pleasure of handing the blog over to Averill Earls, Producer of Dig: A History Podcast. Please read on to learn the process behind researching, writing, and recording "A Changeling or His Wife? The Brutal Murder of Bridget Cleary"- a story plucked from 1890s Ireland and served to you through Dig: At Dig: A History P
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