Episodios

  • The Woman's Hour: The Great Fight to Win the Vote (RE-RELEASE)
    Aug 18 2025

    Please enjoy this re-release of a past episode of For the Ages. New episodes will return Fall 2025.

    The women’s suffrage movement was a hard-fought, decades-long campaign to extend that most essential of democratic rights to all Americans regardless of sex. That protracted struggle would rapidly come to a head in August of 1920 in Tennessee, the final state needed to ratify the 19th Amendment. Author and journalist Elaine Weiss talks with David Rubenstein about the struggles of the suffragists against misogynistic politics, members of the church, and even other women in that fateful month when everything hung in the balance.

    Recorded on September 25, 2020

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    27 m
  • Justice Deferred: Race and the Supreme Court (RE-RELEASE)
    Aug 4 2025

    Please enjoy this re-release of a past episode of For the Ages. New episodes will return Fall 2025.

    While the Supreme Court is often presented in American history as a protector of civil liberties, its record across the centuries provides a more complex picture. While the short period of the 1930s to the 1970s saw the Court end segregation and safeguard both free speech and the vote, during the preceding period, the Court largely ignored or suppressed basic rights for many Americans. The succeeding period, too, saw a retreat and even regression on gains made toward racial justice. Prizewinning author and professor of history Orville Vernon Burton charts the Court’s racial jurisprudence, discussing the many cases involving America’s racial minorities and the impact of individual rulings.

    Recorded on July 6, 2023

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    28 m
  • The Code Breaker: Jennifer Doudna, Gene Editing, and the Future of the Human Race
    Jul 21 2025

    Please enjoy this re-release of a past episode of For the Ages. New episodes will return Fall 2025.

    Bestselling author Walter Isaacson, in conversation with David M. Rubenstein, discusses the life and work of the Nobel Prize-winning Jennifer Doudna who, with her collaborators, created a DNA-editing tool with the power to revolutionize human health.

    Recorded on February 19, 2021

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    27 m
  • One Nation Under God: A History of Religion in America (RE-RELEASE)
    Jul 7 2025

    Please enjoy this re-release of a past episode of For the Ages. New episodes will return Fall 2025.

    Enshrined in our Constitution and etched into our currency, religion is inextricable from the fabric of American political and social life. The ubiquity of religion in our national history has also made it an elusive, at times contradictory, force in this country’s growth—one that is associated with freedom and tolerance as often as it is with censure and control. Catherine Brekus, professor of American religious history at Harvard Divinity School, joins David Rubenstein to discuss the complex and fascinating role religious practice and expression has played in shaping the United States.

    Recorded on November 20, 2020

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    27 m
  • 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 m
  • 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 m
  • 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 m
  • The Revolutionary: Samuel Adams
    May 12 2025

    Samuel Adams was called “the most elegant writer, the most sagacious politician, and celebrated patriot” by John Adams, his second cousin, and was applauded by other colleagues such as Thomas Jefferson. A mastermind behind the Boston Tea Party who helped mobilize the colonies to revolution, he is nonetheless an often overlooked figure amongst the Founding Fathers. Historian Stacy Schiff examines his transformation from the listless, failing son of a wealthy family into the tireless, silver-tongued revolutionary who rallied the likes of John Hancock and John Adams behind him.

    Recorded on November 28, 2023

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    27 m