The Spectral Summit
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!
Episodes
11 episodes
Episode 10 - Dorothy Parker - The Telephone Call
Join us as we explore the wit and dark humor of Dorothy Parker who is best remembered for her razor wit. "The Telephone Call" which originally appeared in the January 1928 issue of The Bookman, is one of her most psychologically raw in...
Episode 9 - The Literary Summit - Tell Tale Poe
Welcome to our exploration of The Raven, The Tell-Tale Heart, and Annabel Lee — three of Edgar Allan Poe’s most haunting and enduring works. In this episode, Kelley discusses the meaning while Max reads three of...
Silence Dogood Essay No. 8 - Freedom of Speech
In this essay, teen Ben Franklin addresses the importance of Freedom of Speech after his brother James is arrested by the authorities in New England for "Publishing too freely." While his brother is in jail, Ben the apprentice, who was not allo...
Silence Dogood Essay No. 7 - The Bad Poets Society
In this essay, in which Teen Ben Franklin trolls his brother James, Silence Dogood features a real poem (An Elegy upon the much Lamented Death of Mrs. Mehitable Kitel) and dryly praises it as "the most Extraordinary Piece that ev...
Silence Dogood Essay No. 6 - The Vice of Pride
Having moved from the countryside to Boston for the summer, Mrs. Dogood sets her sights on one of colonial society's most despised flaws: pride. Franklin crafts a sharp and funny meditation on vanity, describing how pride blinds people to their...
Silence Dogood Essay No. 5 — Pride and Idleness
In this installment, Teen Ben Franklin uses Silence to push back against a male critic - in today's world, we might call him part of the manosphere- when he suggests that she should criticize women for being lazy before turning her ire t...
Hamilton - Federalist Paper 70 - The Executive Department Further Considered
In Federalist No. 70,
Silence Dogood Essay No. 4 — The Temple of Learning
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 th...
Silence Dogood Essay 3 - Silence's Promise to Her Readers
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 ...
Silence Dogood Essay 2 - Colonial Education & Female Literary
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 eightee...
Silence Dogood Essay 1 - Teen Ben Franklin's Prank
In this first episode, Kelley explains how sixteen-year-old Benjamin Franklin couldn’t get his writing published — so he invented a widow. In the first Silence Dogood essay, Franklin secretly introduces a witty fictional voice that...