For the Ages: A History Podcast Podcast By The New York Historical cover art

For the Ages: A History Podcast

For the Ages: A History Podcast

By: The New York Historical
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Explore the rich and complex history of the United States and beyond. Produced by The New York Historical, host David M. Rubenstein engages the nation’s foremost historians and creative thinkers on a wide range of topics, including presidential biography, the nation’s founding, and the people who have shaped the American story. Learn more at nyhistory.org.

© 2025 For the Ages: A History Podcast
Political Science Politics & Government World
Episodes
  • America’s Ongoing Reconstruction
    Jun 23 2025

    Lasting from 1865 to 1877, Reconstruction in the American South was an aspirational endeavor that brought with it newly enshrined rights for Black Americans, including Black male suffrage, birthright citizenship, and equal protection under the law, as well as the hope of national reconciliation. Despite early progress in education and government, lack of support and Southern resistance led to setbacks. In this conversation, Selwyn Vickers joins David M. Rubenstein to discuss how challenges to justice, citizenship, and equality persist.

    Recorded on January 30, 2024

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    27 mins
  • American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer
    Jun 9 2025

    As the man who led the effort to create the most violent weapon in the history of mankind with the invention of the atomic bomb, J. Robert Oppenheimer is a divisive figure in American history. From his childhood in New York City to his career as a physicist through World War II and the Cold War, Kai Bird offers a riveting account of Oppenheimer’s life and how he weighed the complex moral implications of his life’s work.

    Recorded on April 3, 2024

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    27 mins
  • Justice by Means of Democracy
    May 26 2025

    John F. Kennedy advised Americans to ask not what their country could do for them, but what they could do for their country. Scholar Danielle Allen argues that civic engagement such as Kennedy was suggesting is the only true path to a just society—a framework she refers to as “power-sharing liberalism.” While liberalism more generally is the idea that a government should be based on rights that both protect and empower individuals, Allen’s proposed framework calls for a country in which no single group has a monopoly on political, economic, or social power—a society that can only be achieved if the people stand up and speak and the government listens.

    Recorded on February 28, 2024

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    27 mins
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