

Nostalgia Trap
David Parsons
Deep dive conversations on American history, politics, and pop culture, hosted by history professor and writer David Parsons.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Nov 27, 2017 • 1h 24min
Nostalgia Trap - Episode 79: Douglas Williams
Douglas Williams is a fierce political writer and grassroots organizer whose work can be found at TheSouthLawn.org. In this conversation, he tells me about the influence of his father's union work on his political development, and how the letdown of the Obama years led him, like many others, to the radical left.

Nov 15, 2017 • 1h 21min
Nostalgia Trap - Episode 78: RE: Louis CK with Peter Sabatino
Peter Sabatino, the Nostalgia Trap's producer and sound wizard, joins me to unpack the recent revelations about Louis CK's abusive behavior. Our conversation attempts to put this stuff in context, discussing both Louis' disturbing comedic output and the wider problem of predatory men protected by their social, political, and cultural power.

Nov 9, 2017 • 1h 16min
Nostalgia Trap - Episode 77: Nelson Lichtenstein
Nelson Lichtenstein is a professor of history at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he also serves as the director of the Center for the Study of Work, Labor, and Democracy. He joins me to talk about his time at Berkeley during the radical uprisings of the 1960s, his development as a labor historian, and the state of American politics.

Nov 2, 2017 • 1h 10min
Nostalgia Trap - Episode 76: Christian Appy
Christian Appy's work on the history of the Vietnam War has had an enormous influence on the direction of my own research and writing on the war. In this conversation, Appy joins me to talk about the Ken Burns/Lynn Novick documentary, The Vietnam War, which aired on PBS in October. We analyze the Burns aesthetic and discuss how the film avoids confronting the war's most troubling questions.

Oct 23, 2017 • 1h 6min
Nostalgia Trap - Episode 75: David Fouser
David Fouser is a professor of history who recently completed a Ph.D at the University of California, Irvine. In this conversation he tells me all about the field of environmental history, how grad school drew him (and, seemingly, everyone else) to the left, and the particular contours of academic life in Los Angeles.

Oct 17, 2017 • 1h 8min
Nostalgia Trap - Episode 74: Book Club, RE: Stephen King
Fifty years after publishing his first short story, Stephen King remains a powerful force in American popular culture. Claudia Moreno Parsons joins me to talk about what King's work has meant to us personally and his place in the wider spectrum of American literature.

Oct 2, 2017 • 59min
Nostalgia Trap - Episode 73: AM/FM - Dreamer? I Barely Know Her!
In this episode, Justin Rogers-Cooper and I take on the immigration debate from our typically broader historical perspective. How did we get from "tear down this wall!" in 1989 to "build the wall!" in 2016, and what do our rapidly hardening state borders tell us about what's coming down the line?

Sep 25, 2017 • 1h 6min
Nostalgia Trap - Episode 72: Mikhail Gershovich
Mikhail Gershovich was my boss at the Bernard L. Schwartz Communication Institute in New York, where we were both surprised to discover that we had each been raised in Ventura County during the 1980s. Now that we're both living in California again (Mikhail is academic director at Emerson College in Los Angeles), I get to hear about his early childhood in the Soviet Union, how his family came to the U.S. in 1979, and what it was like becoming American in Southern California during the height of the 1980s Cold War.

Jul 16, 2017 • 1h 8min
Nostalgia Trap - Episode 71: Vincent DiGirolamo
On my way out of Baruch College after twelve years of teaching in the history department, I stopped by Professor Vincent DiGirolamo's office to talk with him about his youth in California and his path to academia in New York City.

Jul 4, 2017 • 47min
Nostalgia Trap - Episode 70: AM/FM - One Planet to Burn
Climate change is a favorite topic for me and my friend Justin Rogers-Cooper, who joins me here to talk about the state of the planet and the doomed human species in the Trump era. Despite its apocalyptic implications, our conversation takes an improbably optimistic turn, as Justin explains how the recent Star Wars entry Rogue One might point the way to a horizontal, inclusive politics strong enough to confront an increasingly challenging future.