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PODCAST · government

Field Notes on the Republic

A daily essay on history, freedom, and democracy, read aloud. Not from a historian or a journalist, but from a tour guide and traveler who has spent as much of life inside America as out of it. Field Notes on the Republic is one person learning out loud, writing toward an America that treats education as a virtue and means it when it calls itself a melting pot. New episodes every day.

  1. 3

    The Naturalization Oath, Read Closely

    Every naturalized citizen takes an oath, and most citizens by birth have never read it. It is the clearest statement we have of what citizenship actually asks: allegiance not to a ruler or a party but to the Constitution and the laws, and a set of real responsibilities, not only rights. A close reading of the promise, and why everyone should know it.Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

  2. 2

    Caucus, the Most American Word Nobody Can Trace

    Every four years, a single word climbs the dictionary lookups: caucus. It is one of the most distinctly American words in the language, and nobody knows where it comes from. The mystery is the point, the habit of ordinary people gathering in a room to govern themselves is older than the record-keeping, older than the institutions it holds up.Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

  3. 1

    The Jury, Self-Government's Smallest Room

    Most self-government happens at a distance, through people we elect. The jury is the exception, the one place the government's power is handed directly to twelve ordinary people in a room. Why the founders wrote this right into the Constitution three separate times, and why they deliberately handed the decision to amateurs rather than experts.Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

  4. 0

    The Summer of 1787, Behind Closed Windows

    The Constitution was written in a sealed room, through one of the hottest summers anyone could remember, with the windows shut on purpose. Why the Convention's secrecy rule, unsettling as it first sounds, was the condition that made honest argument and real compromise possible, and why the line they drew, private drafting, public deciding, still matters.Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

  5. -1

    The Five Freedoms of the First Amendment, Counted

    The First Amendment is the most quoted line in American civic life and one of the least carefully read. It is forty-five words long, and inside them are not one freedom but five. Counting them, religion twice, then speech, press, assembly, and petition, and seeing how they form a single chain from a thought in one head to a demand on the government's desk.Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

  6. -2

    Filibuster, the Word That Began as a Term for Piracy

    Before it meant a senator talking a bill to death, the word filibuster meant a pirate. Following it from the Dutch and Spanish words for a freebooter to the floor of the United States Senate is a short, clear lesson in how a chamber built to slow things down can be made to stop them altogether, and what the difference costs.Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

  7. -3

    The Lunch Counter in Greensboro

    On February 1, 1960, four freshmen sat down at a segregated Woolworth's lunch counter in Greensboro and asked to be served. It looks like spontaneous courage. It was planned, down to the receipts in their pockets. How discipline and preparation turned a single act into a movement that reached 55 cities in two months.Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

  8. -4

    The Tennessee Vote That Finished the Nineteenth Amendment

    On August 18, 1920, a 24-year-old Tennessee legislator wearing a red rose, the color of a vote against, walked in with a letter from his mother in his pocket. Harry Burn cast the vote that finished the Nineteenth Amendment. How a seventy-two year campaign came down, in the end, to one young man and a note that told him to be a good boy.Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

  9. -5

    Why Some of the Founders Feared a Bill of Rights

    The Bill of Rights is the part of the Constitution most Americans can name, so it is surprising that some of the ablest framers argued against having one at all. Their objection was serious: that listing rights might imply the unlisted ones were surrendered. How the disagreement was resolved, not by one side winning, but by writing the loser's warning into the Ninth Amendment.Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

  10. -6

    Marbury, and the Case That Built a Power

    The case that gave American courts their defining power was, on its surface, a quarrel about a job, and the man who brought it lost. How Chief Justice John Marshall, boxed in by a political crisis with no good options, built the power of judicial review in 1803 while appearing to limit his own court. A republic is not only inherited; in places it was constructed.Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

  11. -7

    The Printer, the Jury, and a Morning in 1735

    In 1735 a German immigrant printer sat in a New York jail for setting the type of a paper that criticized the royal governor. By every rule of law then in force, the governor was going to win. How twelve jurors did something the law did not permit, and how American press freedom traces a clear line back to that morning.Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

  12. -8

    Near v. Minnesota, the Case That Buried Prior Restraint

    On June 1, 1931, the Supreme Court ruled for a newspaper almost nobody would want to defend, a scandal sheet, by a single vote, and settled one of the most important questions in American press freedom. Near v. Minnesota holds because it located the protection in the act of publishing, not in the worth of the publisher. The unlovable plaintiff is the point.Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

  13. -9

    A Republic, If You Can Keep It

    A republic, if you can keep it, the line attributed to Franklin at the close of the Convention. Historians treat the anecdote with caution, but the second half is true and easy to forget. The whole point is the conditional: the founders handed the country not a finished possession but a standing task, and the keeping is the work of every generation.Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

  14. -10

    The Idea of a Loyal Opposition

    The party out of power in Britain is called His Majesty's Loyal Opposition, and the phrase only sounds like a contradiction. It is one of the most important ideas a free country ever worked out: that you can oppose the government and still be loyal to the nation. Why the distinction makes peaceful transfers of power possible, and why it is a fragile habit rather than a law.Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

  15. -11

    How Americans Came to Vote in Secret

    Picture an American election in the mid-nineteenth century: no booth, no curtain, often a party-printed ballot handed over in full view of a watching crowd. The private ballot is not a founding feature; it is a reform, and it arrived later than most people assume. How the secret ballot was won, and what its privacy actually protects.Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

A daily essay on history, freedom, and democracy, read aloud. Not from a historian or a journalist, but from a tour guide and traveler who has spent as much of life inside America as out of it. Field Notes on the Republic is one person learning out loud, writing toward an America that treats education as a virtue and means it when it calls itself a melting pot. New episodes every day.

HOSTED BY

Michael Fowler

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Field Notes on the Republic have?

Field Notes on the Republic currently has 15 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Field Notes on the Republic about?

A daily essay on history, freedom, and democracy, read aloud. Not from a historian or a journalist, but from a tour guide and traveler who has spent as much of life inside America as out of it. Field Notes on the Republic is one person learning out loud, writing toward an America that treats...

How often does Field Notes on the Republic release new episodes?

Field Notes on the Republic has 15 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Field Notes on the Republic?

You can listen to Field Notes on the Republic on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Field Notes on the Republic?

Field Notes on the Republic is created and hosted by Michael Fowler.
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