112 Episodes

  1. Episode 92: Athanasius' Life of Antony

    Published: 8/8/2021
  2. Episode 91: The Passion of Perpetua and Felicity

    Published: 7/25/2021
  3. Episode 90: Ante-Nicene Catholicism

    Published: 7/4/2021
  4. Episode 89: The Aethiopica of Heliodorus

    Published: 6/19/2021
  5. Episode 88: Ancient Greek Sci-fi

    Published: 5/21/2021
  6. Episode 87: Lucian of Samosata

    Published: 5/7/2021
  7. Episode 86: An Introduction to Late Antiquity

    Published: 4/25/2021
  8. Episode 85: River

    Published: 4/4/2021
  9. Episode 84: Manichaeism

    Published: 3/14/2021
  10. Episode 83: Gnosticism

    Published: 2/28/2021
  11. Episode 82: Zoroastrianism

    Published: 1/31/2021
  12. Episode 81: Revelation

    Published: 1/10/2021
  13. Episode 80: The General Epistles

    Published: 10/14/2020
  14. Episode 79: The Pauline Epistles

    Published: 9/25/2020
  15. Episode 78: The Book of Acts

    Published: 9/11/2020
  16. Episode 77: The Gospels

    Published: 6/30/2020
  17. Episode 76: Judea Under Herod

    Published: 6/7/2020
  18. Episode 75: Dusk and Starlight

    Published: 4/25/2020
  19. Episode 74: Marcus Aurelius (The Meditations)

    Published: 3/14/2020
  20. Episode 73: The Golden Ass (Apuleius' The Golden Ass)

    Published: 2/29/2020

2 / 6

With millions of downloads, hundreds of hours of soundtracked content, and an overall emphasis on the cultural history behind famous works of literature, Literature and History is one of the most popular independent podcasts on its subject. Starting with Sumerian cuneiform in 3,100 BCE, Literature and History moves forward in chronological order through Assyriology, Egyptology, the Old Testament, Ancient Greece and Rome, the birth of Christianity, and the early Middle Ages. The show's current season is on early Islamic history. A typical episode (they average about two hours) features a general introduction to a work of literature, then a full summary of that work that expects no prior knowledge, and finally, an analysis of the cultural, biographical, and historical forces that gave rise to the work in question. Original symphonic and ambient background music is woven throughout each show, and all episodes offer free full, illustrated, footnoted transcriptions as well as quizzes for purposes of review. The show has no advertisements, and its host takes pride in a professional approach that avoids chitchat and ephemera and gets straight to the educational content. You can listen to the episodes in any order, although most listeners begin at the beginning and proceed from there, as the podcast itself is chronologically organized. Doug Metzger finished his Ph.D. in literature in 2011. His chief scholarly interest, following his dissertation work, continues to be 19th-century realism and postbellum American philosophy.