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  • New Books Network

    Legacy of the Ancient Greeks: On Classical and Modern Democracy with Josiah Ober

    17/06/2026
    American democracy is in a period of crisis, so it seems natural to look back to its origins. So here in Episode 10 of Season 5, I interview Professor Josiah Ober.

    Having previously taught at Princeton University, Ober is a professor of political science, classics, and philosophy at Stanford University, the Director of the Stanford Civics Initiative, as well as a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. The author of many books, including Mass and Elite in Democratic Athens (1989), The Rise and Fall of Classical Greece (2015), and Civic Bargain (2023), co-written with Brook Manville, he was previously a Madison’s Notes guest in Season 3.

    Drawing on his 2015 book, we discuss the history of ancient Greece and the political legacy of its classical period. Our conversation ranges from the Bronze Age Collapse and the age of Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey to the rise of the Greek city-state and decline of democratic Athens.

    We discuss contingencies of the Peloponnesian war, the cases for and against Alcibiades, whether the polity flourished under Macedonian and Roman empires, the relationship of philosophy to civics, was Socrates guilty and how much did Plato invent about him, in what way the god Hermes symbolized Greek trade in the Mediterranean, if James Madison truly understood ancient history, and lastly Ober’s work with the growing civics programs in American higher education.

    Hosted by Ryan Shinkel, Madison’s Notes is the podcast of Princeton University’s James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions. The transcript for this interview is available on our new Substack page, “Madison’s Footnotes.”
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  • New Books Network

    Adrian Ciani, "Contesting Zion: The Vatican, American Catholics, and the Partition of Palestine" (McGill-Queen's UP, 2025)

    17/06/2026 | 57 mins.
    The modern relationship between the Vatican and the State of Israel is rooted in a long history of hostility between Judaism and Roman Catholicism. Through the centuries, popes and theologians marginalized the Jewish people, assigning them collective guilt for the death of Jesus Christ and claiming that the sacred territory of Palestine was the true patrimony of the Roman Catholic Church. With the advent of political Zionism in the nineteenth century, Catholic fears of a Jewish-dominated Palestine were renewed.

    Contesting Zion: The Vatican, American Catholics, and the Partition of Palestine (McGill-Queen's UP, 2025) examines the relationship between the Vatican and the Zionist movement from the Balfour Declaration in 1917 to the first decade of Israeli statehood. Adrian Ciani considers the transnational nature of Catholic responses to Zionism and the creation of Israel, with a focus on the Catholic Church in the United States. From the 1920s through the 1950s, American Catholic leaders became crucial intermediaries between Washington and the Vatican. Speaking as both loyal American citizens and devout Catholics, they were uniquely positioned to articulate the Vatican’s policy objectives to the American government, including on the future of Palestine. American Catholics were also instrumental in advocating the church’s Palestine policy at the United Nations, playing a central role in the Holy See’s attempts to shape the twentieth-century international order.

    Roberto Mazza is currently a visiting scholar at the Buffett Institute for Global Affairs at Northwestern University. He is the host of the Jerusalem Unplugged Podcast and to discuss and propose a book for interview can be reached at robbymazza@gmail.com. Blusky and IG: @robbyref
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  • New Books Network

    Great Minds in Despair

    17/06/2026 | 45 mins.
    In this episode of the Language on the Move Podcast, Ingrid Piller speaks with Frank Stahnisch, Professor of the History of Medicine and Health Care at the University of Calgary in Canada, about his new book Great Minds in Despair – The Forced Migration of German-Speaking Neuroscientists to North America, 1933 to 1989 (2025, McGill-Queen’s University Press).

    Great Minds in Despair examines the long-term effects of the forced migration of neuroscientists from the German lands in the 20th century on scientific and medical cultures in North America, and on the researchers themselves. The book traces the lives and careers of approximately 400 German-speaking doctors, scientists, and researchers over two generations. It is a fascinating read that anyone interested in migration, science history, Nazi Germany, transatlantic relations, Jewish Studies, and much more should read.

    Reference

    Stahnisch, F. W. (2025). Great Minds in Despair: The Forced Migration of German-Speaking Neuroscientists to North America, 1933 to 1989. McGill-Queen's University Press.

    For additional resources, show notes, and transcripts, go here.
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  • New Books Network

    Anna Harwell Celenza, "On the Record: Music that Changed America (Norton, 2026)

    17/06/2026 | 59 mins.
    There is no shortage of books on music and politics, but Anna Harwell Celenza explores an interesting premise in her book On the Record: Music that Changed America (Norton, 2026). Each of the twelve chapters discusses a different instance when music, as Celenza writes, “sparked debates in the halls of Congress.” Arranged basically chronologically, Celenza tackles some of the most powerful and contentious issues in twentieth and twenty-first century American politics. From censorship to copyright law; from the Civil Rights Movement, to foreign policy during Apartheid, Celenza traces the extraordinary moments when music moved Congress, challenged power, and united people around shared ideals. The stories Celenza tells are just as much about music including the intertwined histories of “The Star Spangled Banner” and “Lift Every Voice and Sing” or the making of Paul Simon’s album Graceland, as they are about US legislation or American politics. She offers readers a history of America heard through the songs and compositions that changed its course.
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  • New Books Network

    Samantha Ellis, "Always Carry Salt: A Memoir of Preserving Language and Culture" (Pegasus Books, 2026)

    17/06/2026 | 49 mins.
    I had the privilege of speaking with writer Samantha Ellis about her deeply moving new book, Always Carry Salt: A Memoir of Preserving Language and Culture (Pegasus
    Books, 2026). Our discussion explored not only the story of a
    disappearing language, but also the broader questions of memory,
    identity, and what it means to inherit a fragile cultural legacy.

    At the heart of Ellis’s book is Judeo-Iraqi Arabic—also known as
    Baghdadi Jewish Arabic or Hakimalna—a language once spoken by the Jews
    of Iraq. Rich with layers of Hebrew and Judeo-Babylonian Aramaic, it
    reflects over two millennia of Jewish life in the region. Today,
    however, it stands on the brink of extinction. As Ellis shared, a
    language is considered endangered when it is no longer passed on to
    children, and Judeo-Iraqi Arabic may have only about a thousand speakers
    remaining worldwide. Within a generation, it could fall silent.

    Ellis described a powerful turning point in her own awareness: a
    casual question from another parent about why she was not sending her
    son to a nursery that spoke “her language.” Her spontaneous response—“my
    language is dead”—became the catalyst for the journey that led to this
    book. That moment captures the quiet grief of linguistic loss, but also
    the urgency of preservation.

    Our conversation traced the long arc of Iraqi Jewish history,
    beginning with the Babylonian exile in 597 BCE. Iraqi Jews lived in the
    region long before the arrival of Arabic, shifting over centuries from
    Hebrew to Aramaic and later to Arabic, while preserving distinctive
    linguistic features from earlier eras. This layered history lives on in
    the language itself. Yet the mass departures of Iraqi Jews in the
    mid-20th century—particularly the 1950–51 airlift—fractured this
    continuity. Today, only a handful of Jews remain in Iraq.

    And yet, as Ellis emphasized, culture does not disappear all at once.
    Language may fade, but other forms of transmission endure. Food, in
    particular, becomes a powerful vessel of memory. Ellis initially
    resisted including recipes in her book, but came to understand that
    cooking is itself a kind of language—a sensory bridge to the past. The
    image of her mother carrying three rolling pins from Iraq is emblematic
    of this continuity: tangible objects that hold intangible heritage. Even
    the book’s title gesture—“always carry salt”—evokes protective
    practices familiar across Mizrahi communities, small rituals that encode
    belief, memory, and identity.

    We also discussed the remarkable story of the Iraqi Jewish Archive,
    discovered in 2003 in the flooded basement of Saddam Hussein’s secret
    police headquarters. The archive contains hundreds of thousands of
    documents—school records, letters, communal registers—offering an
    intimate portrait of everyday Jewish life in Iraq. Today, innovative
    projects are using AI to transcribe and translate these materials across
    multiple scripts, making them accessible to descendants and scholars
    alike. Yet the archive’s ultimate fate remains uncertain, raising
    complex questions about ownership, memory, and cultural restitution.

    A particularly resonant theme in our conversation was Ellis’s
    struggle with authenticity. As a second-generation Iraqi Jew raised in
    the UK, she grappled with whether she had the “right” to tell this
    story, especially without having visited Iraq herself. Her resolution—to
    be “authentic to me”—offers an important model for thinking about
    diasporic identity. Preservation, she suggests, does not require perfect
    replication. It allows for adaptation, creativity, even reinvention.
    One can honor tradition while also “messing with it,” whether by
    adjusting a recipe or reimagining inherited practices.

    Ellis introduces a beautiful concept she calls “milk language”—the
    language absorbed in early childhood, through intimacy and care, even if
    it is not the dominant language of one’s environment. This idea invites
    us to reconsider how language lives within us, not only as a tool of
    communication but as a carrier of emotional and cultural memory.

    As an educator, I was especially struck by Ellis’s closing insight
    and her implicit call to action: to speak with our elders while we still
    can. There is a profound difference between hearing fragments of family
    stories in childhood and sitting down, as an adult, to listen fully and
    intentionally. These conversations do more than preserve history; they
    create connection, continuity, and a deeper sense of self.

    Always Carry Salt is not only a memoir. It is an
    invitation—to remember, to document, and to carry forward what might
    otherwise be lost. In a time when so many cultural threads are at risk
    of unraveling, Ellis’s work reminds us that preservation begins with
    attention, with curiosity, and with the willingness to listen.
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