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Episodes (8)

This episode examines how the Gallipoli campaign became the foundation of the Anzac legend, shaped by wartime journalism and ideals of bush masculinity and egalitarianism. It also exposes the exclusions beneath the myth, from the sidelining of women to the discrimination faced by Indigenous veterans after the war.

This episode traces the extraordinary life of Douglas Grant, an Aboriginal boy rescued from a massacre who grew up in Scotland-inflected Lithgow to become a gifted draughtsman and war veteran. It follows his service on the Western Front, his capture by German scientists, and the heartbreaking racism he faced after returning home.

This episode traces how George Custer was transformed from a post-Little Bighorn folk hero into a twentieth-century antihero, shaped by poems, biographies, lithographs, and Hollywood. It explores how American culture repeatedly traded historical complexity for myths that fit the nation’s changing anxieties.

This episode unpacks how the Battle of the Little Bighorn was transformed into instant myth, from Walt Whitman’s poem to the making of Custer as a romantic martyr. It also explores the realities behind the legend: Native resistance, buffalo extermination, military blunders, and the politics that turned a defeat into a national story.

This episode traces how the defeat at Little Bighorn was transformed into the myth of Custer as a heroic martyr, while the U.S. used that outrage to justify land theft, forced assimilation, and the destruction of Native sovereignty. It culminates in the tragic chain of events from the Ghost Dance to Wounded Knee, exposing how imperial policy and propaganda reshaped history.

We explore the strange charm of giant roadside icons, from Robertson’s Pig Potato to Muffler Men and Big Pineapples, and how these oversized objects turn ordinary places into landmarks. Along the way, the episode digs into ideas of camp, place-making, and the cultural meaning behind these playful monuments.

This episode examines how the 1947 Partition reshaped South Asian history, from the Radcliffe Line and the Indus heritage to the competing claims of India and Pakistan. It also unpacks the dangerous myths behind the Aryan invasion theory and how colonial pseudoscience and Hindutva turned language, race, and identity into political weapons.