Episode

Paul Kennedy on Great Powers, Past and Present

Podcast
ChinaTalk
Published
Jun 8, 2026
Duration seconds
4720
Processing state
not_requested
Canonical source
https://pscrb.fm/rss/p/traffic.megaphone.fm/CHTAL3324264632.mp3
Audio
https://pscrb.fm/rss/p/traffic.megaphone.fm/CHTAL3324264632.mp3
JSON
/v1/public/podcasts/chinatalk-418044/episodes/paul-kennedy-on-great-powers-past-and-present
Markdown
/podcast/chinatalk-418044/paul-kennedy-on-great-powers-past-and-present.md

Actions

  • POST https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/chinatalk-418044/episodes/paul-kennedy-on-great-powers-past-and-present/transcription-requests
    Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode.
  • GET https://stenobird.com/podcast/chinatalk-418044/paul-kennedy-on-great-powers-past-and-present.md
    Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource.

Summary

What a profound honor to have Paul Kennedy on the ChinaTalk podcast. Kennedy is my favorite living historian and the writer who’s most shaped my intellectual development. His analysis underpins what you hear on this show every week. The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers is an epochal work that traces global power transitions from 1500 to the present. It’s gripping, forest-and-trees scholarship at its finest. Equally impressive in different ways is his book, The Rise of Anglo-German Antagonism, 1860 to 1914. Not only is it god-tier diplomatic history, it also gives you a feel for the era through its explorations of social, economic, domestic, political, and cultural dimensions of Anglo-German relations. There are fascinating US/China analogies that we’ll get into at some point in this podcast. His two most recent works directly inform the military coverage on China Talk. Engineers of Victory looks at how people and the systems they worked within solved engineering challenges that turned the tide for entire theaters in World War II. His latest, Victory at Sea: Naval Power and the Transformation of Global Order in World War II, is a sweeping history of a radical transformation in the balance of military power, from the mid-1930s when America was just gaining prominence, to after World War II, when it had no other significant naval competitor. The Parliament of Man: A History of the United Nations first got me interested in international organizations and gave me my senior thesis topic about the creation of the UN. What Kennedy taught me more than anything is this: sweat the details, look at the individual players, and zoom out often enough to understand what truly shapes the long-term fate of nations. Over the course of this episode, we pick up themes from all across his…