This is probably about the eighth Great Courses series that I have listened to, and I think it’s probably the best. Steinberg’s goal is not so much to give you a bunch of potted biographies, but rather to take individual people to show particular facets of the long 18th century, the transition from the ancient regime through to its total collapse in World War I and the rise of modernity.
Especially through Mike Duncan (Revolutions podcast), and various other readings, I am fairly familiar with the political structure of the long 18th century. So in a certain sense I’m not optimally suited for judging the success of Steinberg’s project of explaining the structure of an epoch via biographies: I already have a decent sense of the 18th-century landscape. But he chooses people extremely well, it’s a very well thought out list of people from a variety of backgrounds, who also illustrate specific and interesting facets of 18th century. I think his choice of subjects is excellent, there are a few figures that are household names, and hard to get around like Robespierre and Napoleon. But many the others are figures I knew the significance of, like Hume or Maria Teresa (I had already listened to a full episode of Duncan doing a biography of Maria Teresa), but nevertheless Steinberg is able to give biographical details and historical significance that largely I only had traces of before. So the outline that I have from these other sources now are these very well filled in markers at specific points that fill in extra detail on how specific people fit in to that outline.
Steinberg is an excellent rhetorician: no ums, buts, or annoying breathing; he is American, but spent many years at Oxford, so that gives him a bit of a sense of both sides of the Atlantic, and his spoken English reflects that. The lectures are organized, and clearly are done from notes, but it’s at least partly extemporaneous and the cadence is truly conversational, without any NPR voice or repeated inflections.
He is obviously enamored with his subjects, but I think he also still gives fair assessments of them, and he’s obviously very engaged in the project of doing this course. Unlike some other Great Courses, which are adaptations of college courses that the professors may be done many times, Steinberg is doing this for fun and for his own entertainment, and that comes across in the best possible way. He has a particular gift for collating contemporaneous commentators, dropping quotes that really put the subjects into context and show how they were viewed at the time.
There are a few places where Steinberg brings in his own worldview in a way that is distracting and misplaced, especially his rather haphazard and anecdotal gender-essentialist commentary in the Wollstonecraft lecture. If you can kind of mentally edit that out, it's only like 0.5% of the lectures (so far, anyway). I don't think he's like super-reactionary or even conservative, but it was just a bit out-of-touch boomer. The Pasteur and Darwin bios also seemed a bit weaker, which he admits: Steinberg is not a scientist. But he does the work to make them decent (he says he consulted with two historians of science for Pasteur); and it perhaps only against the brilliance of his German and Jewish lectures (esp.: Frederick, Bismarck, Rothschild, Dreyfus), which Steinberg spent his career on, that they might seem to not measure up.
Highly recommended.