Geschiedenis – Nigeria – Populaire podcasts
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The Republic is a narrative podcast series exploring pivotal Nigerian and broader African historical events and figures. In the second season, host Wale Lawal traces the life and legacy of writer and activist, Ken Saro-Wiwa. For much of the 90s, Saro-Wiwa led a non-violent movement against oil pollution in the Niger Delta’s Ogoniland. The Nigerian government, however, responded by arresting and later executing Saro-Wiwa and 8 other activists. How did this incident reshape Nigeria’s trajectory?
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Join us as we "time travel," using newspapers, and novels to explore what life was like 160 years ago, In the Victorian Era! Each episode will be host banter, narration of a short story, break down of said short story, for you the 21st century listener, reading the nonfiction section, and then breaking that down, followed by a summary and a relaxing outro. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/victorianparade/support
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DW’s Shadows of German Colonialism podcast explores how Germany’s imperial ambitions in Africa met fierce resistance, and descended into exploitation and violence. The series follows on from the African Roots podcast, which portrays the men and women who shaped Africa's past, present and future. We meets big names, and tell the story of others who have stayed out of the spotlight. But what binds them together, is their African Roots.
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Where fact is stranger than fiction
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Join Evelyn and Lara as they dive into the indelible history that spans Nigeria's past and present. Uncover truth, pique your curiosity and enjoy the ride.
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Globalization and cross-cultural information about the three topics I was given about world history since 1500.
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This is a place where we come together and we’re meeting we we’re missing we so understand that I’m talking to myself so welcome to our comfort zone and the place where everybody knows your name and people are glad you came and you don’t have to be from somewhere to know that you’re somebody I know we are somebody so that means we are super ultra rare. And. This makes sense. ๐๐พ
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How has the American economy affected people of color and those from different backgrounds?
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Covering characters, stories, writers, artists, movie directors, business, politics and more. Everything in and around Batman. We start at the very begining, and work our way chronoligcally through 80 years of Batman.
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A podcast where we'll be diving into the past and unpacking stories found within Africa's history.
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Pra você carregar um pouquinho dele pra onde você for ♥๏ธ
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a podcast series -beyond reading books or school- that arms you with knowledge of Nigeria's history as it relates to our time.
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The Access For who? Podcast hosted by Chao Tayiana Maina and Molemo Moiloa is a five-part mini-series that looks to begin a conversation on the digitisation of African heritage. While digitisation is often considered a strategy for future-oriented safe keeping, distribution and greater engagement, they ask - for who? And for what purposes? And are we making decisions about digitisation that ensure these objectives are met in ethical, equitable ways?
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My podcast is about Nigerian history. There is a reason why history was removed from the syllabus right primary education. Join me on this journey of enlightenment.
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Canada is known as a country where everyone loves each other and it’s portrayed as a perfect harmony kind of country. Reality is that Indigenous peoples don’t get the same treatment and Canada turns a blind-eye to this. Here, I, Kayla Mason, cover topics surrounding Indigenous issues.
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The Journal of African History Podcast highlights interviews with historians whose work has appeared in The Journal of African History, a leading source of peer-reviewed scholarship on Africa’s past since its creation in 1960. Hosted by journal editors and occasional guest hosts, episodes include discussions on how scholars find and interpret sources for African history, how authors’ research contributes to debates among historians, and how Africanist scholarship can add much-needed context to broader social and political debates.
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Telling the true African stories
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They called themselves the Students of Light. Their leader, John Hanas, claimed to be the reincarnation of Jesus Christ. While some claim he had supernatural powers, others call him an abusive cult leader. Hear the groupโs story on Chasing Enlightenment.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Gallo Vault Sessions is a 6-part podcast series brought to you by Gallo in collaboration with KONJO. We delve into the story of Gallo Music, Africa’s largest and oldest recording company, and reflect on the ways music shapes culture, and how our culture has been shaped by music…both at the centre and periphery of Africa’s music history. We bridge 95 years of Gallo’s music history with KONJO’s passion for cultural storytelling and chat with artists, label execs, radio veterans and music thinkers as we explore the undercurrents, backstories and overlooked tapes from the Gallo Vault…from mbaqanga to soul, and of course, provide you with a curated playlist to soundtrack your month.
Follow us on @gallorecordcompany & @k.o.n.j.o
All GVS mixes can be found here: https://www.mixcloud.com/KONJO/ - Laat meer zien