The Spectral Summit Podcast Por Creative Actors Lab arte de portada

The Spectral Summit

The Spectral Summit

De: Creative Actors Lab
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This podcast looks at historic literature and figures from the past. We'll start with a 16-year-old Ben Franklin pranking his brother James in 1722 by writing essays as a middle-aged New England widow who savagely critiques colonial Boston and Harvard. Future episodes include interviews with Warren G. Harding, FDR, Eleanor Roosevelt and Edgar Allen Poe. Stay tuned!

© 2026 The Spectral Summit
Arte Educación Entretenimiento y Artes Escénicas Mundial
Episodios
  • Silence Dogood Essay No. 4 — The Temple of Learning
    Mar 23 2026

    What does a 16-year-old writing under a fake name have to say about college education — and why does it still sting? In 1722, Benjamin Franklin's fictional widow Silence Dogood took aim at Harvard and the parents who sent unprepared students there, not for wisdom, but for status. Through a vivid dream sequence, Dogood walks listeners into the "Temple of Learning" — and what she finds there is more farce than philosophy. Tune in as we unpack Franklin's sharp wit and surprisingly modern critique of higher education.

    Learn more about The Spectral and Literary Summit at our website - www.spectral-summit.com. We offer historic and literary videos and podcasts that make the past and literature come alive. This is a production of Creative Actors Lab . Check out our Instagram page here.

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    13 m
  • Silence Dogood Essay 3 - Silence's Promise to Her Readers
    Mar 16 2026

    This is 16-year-old Ben Franklin's third essay as his alter-ego Silence Dogood, a middle-aged widow who has some strong opinions about the world around her.

    In this shorter but important piece, Silence formally lays out her purpose and promises her readers what they can expect going forward. She acknowledges her civic duty to contribute to society and vows to share the knowledge she has gathered throughout her life. Recognizing that no single writer can please everyone, she cleverly commits to covering a wide variety of topics — from politics to love, humor to serious moral reflection — so that every reader finds something worthwhile. She also personally invites women readers to write to her directly, making this essentially the colonial era's first reader engagement campaign.

    Learn more about The Spectral and Literary Summit at our website - www.spectral-summit.com. We offer historic and literary videos and podcasts that make the past and literature come alive. This is a production of Creative Actors Lab . Check out our Instagram page here.

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    5 m
  • Silence Dogood Essay 2 - Colonial Education & Female Literary
    Mar 9 2026

    In her second letter, Silence Dogood looks back on her childhood — and takes aim at colonial education.

    Writing as a reflective widow, Benjamin Franklin critiques the limits placed on young minds, especially girls, in early eighteenth-century Boston. Silence describes her brief schooling, her love of books, and the ways formal education often failed to nurture curiosity or character.

    Essay Two reveals something important — even at sixteen, Ben Franklin was already thinking deeply about opportunity, learning, and who gets a voice.

    Discussion Question:
    If Silence were writing her essays or letters to the editor today, what would she say about modern education? Who still struggles to be heard — and what would she challenge?

    Learn more about The Spectral and Literary Summit at our website - www.spectral-summit.com. We offer historic and literary videos and podcasts that make the past and literature come alive. This is a production of Creative Actors Lab . Check out our Instagram page here.

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    8 m
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