• Sister Revolutions

  • By: Symposia
  • Podcast

Sister Revolutions

By: Symposia
  • Summary

  • Sister Revolutions is a public history community documentary podcast sponsored by the City of Charlottesville’s Sister Cities Commission (CSCC) and hosted by Brown College's Symposia podcast. Through four episodes released weekly in Spring 2024, historian Benjamin Bernard, Ph.D. and audio producer Sage Tanguay explore the legacy of the American and French Revolutions through the sister city relationship between Charlottesville, Virginia, USA and Besançon, France. The series features extensive conversations with scholars, public historians, curators, and community members at historic and civic institutions in both cities. This project was made possible by: o Brown Residential College o Charlottesville Sister Cities Commission o WTJU and the Virginia Audio Collective o UVA Department of French o The America2026 project (america2026.eu) o Laurent Bruneau
    Copyright 2025
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Episodes
  • #4 – Give Me Liberty
    Nov 15 2024
    Episode Notes

    Give Me Liberty: Charlottesville and the American Revolution from 1776 to 2026

    Historian Benjamin Bernard and producer Sage Tanguay hand the microphone to their University of Virginia students to interview history-lovers and experts in Charlottesville. How did Charlottesville experience the Age of Revolutions? In the lead-up to 2026—which will represent the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence—what should citizens of our sister cities know about revolutionary historical memory today?

    Sister Revolutions is a limited-run documentary series made possible by the Charlottesville Sister Cities Commission, Brown Residential College at the University of Virginia, and America 2026. You can learn more about each of these organizations on their websites: www.cvillesistercities.org, https://browncollege.virginia.edu/ and www.america2026.eu

    • Sister Revolutions is produced and hosted by Benjamin Bernard and Sage Tanguay
    • With production assistance from Sophia Moore
    • French Transcription and Translation by Oriane Guiziou-Lamour
    • Music in this episode was provided by Blue Dot Sessions

    This episode featured the voices of:

    • Iris De Rode
    • Emily Hemlinger
    • Kirt Von Daacke
    • Brennen Muller
    • Kay Slaughter
    • Lara Howell
    • David McCormick

    Special thanks to

    • Elizabeth Smiley of the Charlottesville Sister Cities Commission
    • Ben Larsen of WTJU for running sound at our launch event
    • Bertrand Van Ruymbeke of America 2026
    • Prof. Ari Blatt, Chair of the University of Virginia French Department
    • Florent Werguet, Head of international relations for the City of Besancon
    • Hugo Toudic Associate director of the University of Chicago center in Paris

    Sister Revolutions is hosted by Symposia: a production of Brown Residential College at the University of Virginia and the Virginia Audio Collective at WTJU 91.1 FM.

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    1 hr and 2 mins
  • #3 – Liberty, Equality, Fraternity
    Nov 15 2024
    Episode Notes

    Sister Revolutions III: Liberty, Equality, Fraternity (1776–1848)

    How did the provincial military town of Besançon experience the French Revolution? University of Virginia historian Benjamin Bernard and producer Sage Tanguay consider the transition from monarchy to democracy in a city that produced many of France’s leading social thinkers of the early nineteenth century. This episode features discussions with French and American doctoral students and historians--as well as an extended interview with Léonel de Moustier, a descendant of François-Elie de Moustier, who was the French ambassador to America during the French Revolution.

    Sister Revolutions is a limited-run documentary series made possible by the Charlottesville Sister Cities Commission, Brown Residential College at the University of Virginia, and America 2026. You can learn more about each of these organizations on their websites: www.cvillesistercities.org, https://browncollege.virginia.edu/ and www.america2026.eu

    • Sister Revolutions is produced and hosted by Benjamin Bernard and Sage Tanguay
    • Production assistance from Sophia Moore and Ben Larsen
    • French Transcription and Translation by Oriane Guiziou-Lamour
    • English voiceover by Nathan Moore, Tracey Gerlach, Russ Perry, and Dan Hennicke

    The music in this episode was provided by Blue Dot Sessions and by violinist Daniel Sender, Charlottesville Sister Cities grantee performing music by Michel Blavet (1700-1768).

    This episode featured the voices of:

    • Leïla Tnaïnchi
    • Oriane Guiziou-Lamour
    • André Ferrer from the Société d’émulation du Doubs and Professor Emeritus at the University of Burgundy Franche-Comté
    • Gaëlle Cavalli from the Citadelle of Besançon
    • Lionel Estavoyer
    • Léonel de Moustier
    • Amandine Royer

    Special thanks to

    • Elizabeth Smiley of the Charlottesville Sister Cities Commission
    • Gaspard de Moustier
    • Bertrand Van Ruymbeke of America 2026
    • Prof. Ari Blatt, Chair of the University of Virginia French Department
    • Florent Werguet, Head of international relations for the City of Besançon
    • Hugo Toudic Associate director of the University of Chicago center in Paris

    Sister Revolutions is hosted by Symposia: a production of Brown Residential College at the University of Virginia and the Virginia Audio Collective at WTJU 91.1 FM.

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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • #2 – Enlightenment
    Nov 15 2024
    Episode Notes

    Enlightenment: Besançon, 1740–1788

    Besançon feels in many ways like an eighteenth-century city. In this second episode of “Sister Revolutions,” historian Benjamin Bernard and producer Sage Tanguay explore the intellectual and architectural efflorescence of the Enlightenment in Franche-Comté through interviews with historians—and a visit to Claude Nicolas Ledoux's imaginative Saline Royale (royal salt works) in the nearby village of Arc-et-Senans.

    Sister Revolutions is a limited-run documentary series made possible by the Charlottesville Sister Cities Commission, Brown Residential College at the University of Virginia, and America 2026. You can learn more about each of these organizations on their websites: www.cvillesistercities.org, https://browncollege.virginia.edu/ and www.america2026.eu

    Sister Revolutions is produced and hosted by Benjamin Bernard and Sage Tanguay With production assistance from Sophia Moore French Transcription and Translation by Oriane Guiziou-Lamour And English voiceover by Lewis Reining and Nathan Moore The music in this episode was provided by Blue Dot Sessions

    This episode featured the voices of:

    • Andre Ferrer from the Societe d’emulation du Doubs and Professor Emeritus at the University of Burgundy Franche-Comte
    • Pascal Brunet public architectural historian
    • Gregory Le Moing at the Royal Salt Works of Arc-et-Senans
    • Sarah MacDonald and Yves al-Ghazi

    Special thanks to

    • Elizabeth Smiley of the Charlottesville Sister Cities Commission
    • Bertrand Van Ruymbeke of America 2026
    • Prof. Ari Blatt, Chair of the University of Virginia French Department
    • Florent Werguet, Head of international relations for the City of Besancon
    • Hugo Toudic Associate director of the University of Chicago center in Paris

    Sister Revolutions is hosted by Symposia: a production of Brown Residential College at the University of Virginia and the Virginia Audio Collective at WTJU 91.1 FM.

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    1 hr and 2 mins

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