エピソード

  • Hilma af Klint 1862–1944: The Painter Who Hid Abstract Art’s Future
    2026/07/13

    In 2018 the Guggenheim unveiled over a thousand hidden canvases proving that Swedish artist Hilma af Klint had created fully abstract paintings years before Kandinsky or Mondrian. This episode traces how a respected academic painter secretly produced visionary geometric works, then locked them away for a future she believed would finally understand them.

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    30 分
  • The Chemist Who Was Erased - Alice Ball, 1892–1916
    2026/07/10

    In the early twentieth century, a diagnosis of leprosy in Hawaii meant lifelong exile to the remote Kalaupapa peninsula. Alice Ball, a brilliant young Black chemist, cracked the chemical problem that had defeated doctors for decades, turning chaulmoogra oil into the first effective treatment for Hansen’s disease. Tragically, she died at twenty-four before she could publish her work, and a senior colleague later claimed credit for her discovery, nearly erasing her name from history.

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    30 分
  • The Architect in the Shadows: Bayard Rustin 1912–1987
    2026/07/10

    On August 28, 1963, a quarter-million people marched on Washington—an event that changed the course of civil rights legislation—yet the man who made it happen remained largely invisible. Bayard Rustin, the openly gay, pacifist, ex-Communist organizer whose logistical brilliance delivered the March on Washington, spent decades in the shadows because of who he was. This episode recovers his story and the price he paid for building a movement that could not publicly embrace him.

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    30 分
  • The Doctor Who Begged Them to Wash Their Hands: Ignaz Semmelweis, 1818–1865
    2026/07/09

    In the 1840s, Vienna General Hospital ran two maternity wards with identical patients but wildly different death rates. One young doctor, Ignaz Semmelweis, discovered that a simple hand-washing routine slashed mortality from childbed fever, yet the medical establishment spent decades rejecting him. His story is both a triumph of evidence-based medicine and a haunting reminder of how hard truth can be to accept.

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    32 分
  • Henrietta Swan Leavitt 1868–1921: The Woman Who Measured the Universe
    2026/07/09

    In this episode of Obscure Lives Podcast, we uncover the remarkable story of Henrietta Swan Leavitt, a deaf woman working at Harvard Observatory who discovered the key to measuring cosmic distances and unlocked the true scale of the universe.

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    31 分
  • The Great Impostor: Ferdinand Waldo Demara 1921–1982
    2026/07/08

    In 1951, aboard a Canadian destroyer off Korea, a man claiming to be surgeon-lieutenant Joseph Cyr performed life-saving surgery on wounded soldiers—despite having no medical training. That man was Ferdinand Waldo Demara, the most audacious impostor of the twentieth century, who had already posed as a monk, college dean, psychologist, prison warden, and teacher. This episode traces how Demara repeatedly bluffed his way into high-status roles and why his story still unsettles our faith in credentials.

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    32 分
  • Episode 8: The Man Who Tried to End Hunger- Nikolai Vavilov, 1887–1943
    2026/06/23

    # Episode 8: The Man Who Tried to End Hunger- Nikolai Vavilov, 1887–1943

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    31 分
  • The Emperor of San Francisco: Joshua Norton 1818–1880
    2026/06/21

    In 1880, thousands of San Franciscans—businessmen, laborers, and society figures—turned out to mourn Joshua Norton, a penniless eccentric who had declared himself Emperor of the United States twenty-one years earlier. This episode traces Norton’s improbable rise from Gold Rush merchant to beloved monarch of a city that chose to play along with his fantasy, revealing how one man’s delusions became a shared civic ritual.

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    31 分