The History of Literature

Amateur enthusiast Jacke Wilson journeys through the history of literature, from ancient epics to co

Episodes

Total: 644

Critics didn't know quite what to make of twentieth-century American novelist and poet Jack Kerouac

Aesop's fables - including such classics as "The Tortoise and the Hare," "The Fox and the Grapes," a

It's hard to imagine now, but the United States government wasn't always hostile or indifferent to t

Medieval manuscripts are so wondrously beautiful they deserve comparison with the world's finest wor

Yes, he's the father of English poetry, and yes, he's perhaps best known today for bawdy tales like

Bibliophiles everywhere know the sweet feeling of getting lost in a book. And like all good literary

638 Thomas Mann

2024/9/30

For fifty years, Nobel Prize winner Thomas Mann (1875-1955) lived his life as Germany's preeminent n

We asked, you answered! In response to a listener recommendation, we revisit a conversation from 201

Who was Emily Dickinson? We think we know her, or at least one side of her, from her poems. But what

Dealing with reality can be difficult enough, but when the nature of that reality is completely over

For more than two thousand years, the Bible has been an essential part of the world's conception of

Discussions of Ernest Hemingway tend to focus on the peaks of his career, which are typically center

For almost sixty years, Norman Mailer was a fixture on the American literary scene, seemingly as wel

Recently, we talked to novelist Jodi Picoult about her contention that many of the works commonly at

Was Shakespeare gay? Will Tosh, head of research at Shakespeare's Globe Theater in London, says that

For thousands of years, desperate writers have struggled with the condition known as writer's block.

Is it really true? Did the Elizabethan poet Emilia Bassano (sometimes known as Aemelia Lanyer) actua

It's one of the most famous and admired short stories that Ernest Hemingway ever wrote - and also on

As fans of literature, we all know how powerful and effective storytelling can be. But can we harnes

Since the publication of Little Women in 1868, millions of readers have gotten to know (and love) Lo