
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Open up your Twitter feed or Facebook page and you're one or two clicks away from a nostalgia meme, they grow like historically illiterate fungi, but nostalgia itself is a more complex and even sometimes problematic phenomenon. In this episode of the Explaining History podcast we hear from Dr Agnes Arnold-Forster, the author of a new history of Nostalgia itself. We explore the first recorded instances of nostalgia in the 17th Century through to its current usage and weaponisation in culture wars. Our shared longings for less complex or worrying times and our fears and misunderstandings about the nature of the past are part of this complex and fluid socially shared emotional and cultural phenomenon.
You can grab a copy of the book here
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4.6
7272 ratings
Open up your Twitter feed or Facebook page and you're one or two clicks away from a nostalgia meme, they grow like historically illiterate fungi, but nostalgia itself is a more complex and even sometimes problematic phenomenon. In this episode of the Explaining History podcast we hear from Dr Agnes Arnold-Forster, the author of a new history of Nostalgia itself. We explore the first recorded instances of nostalgia in the 17th Century through to its current usage and weaponisation in culture wars. Our shared longings for less complex or worrying times and our fears and misunderstandings about the nature of the past are part of this complex and fluid socially shared emotional and cultural phenomenon.
You can grab a copy of the book here
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5,389 Listeners
3,193 Listeners
962 Listeners
956 Listeners
1,902 Listeners
590 Listeners
659 Listeners
664 Listeners
4,675 Listeners
450 Listeners
1,322 Listeners
3,027 Listeners
13,053 Listeners
1,976 Listeners
2,107 Listeners