Category Archives: Media
No, Mr. President. Covid-19 is not easy for everyone to overcome.
Republican Judges Are Quietly Upending Public Health Laws
A Bibliography of Historians’ Responses to COVID-19
The American Historical Association is compiling a professionally vetted bibliography of historians’ responses to COVID-19 as a resource for the public, teachers, and scholars seeking historical perspectives on the current crisis and its local and global impacts.
The bibliography includes commentary and publications by historians in both scholarly and popular periodical literature; recorded lectures and webcasts; and digitized primary source materials from past epidemics and pandemics. In amassing these references, the AHA seeks to provide a space where anyone, regardless of expertise, can find digital historical material relevant to the COVID-19 crisis. Educators will find the bibliography especially useful as a professionally vetted index of online resources amenable to remote instruction.
Infectious Historians
A podcast and blog created by historians Merle Eisenberg and Lee Mordechai, historians of disease, the environment, and medieval history. The podcast aims to both provide a flavor of past disease outbreaks while also discussing some pressing present questions. Some episodes discuss a historical pandemic as a way to give a sense of what has happened in the past to contextualize the present. Other episodes will feature experts to discuss specific aspects of disease from quarantine to disease modeling. Future episode arcs will include episodes with scholars on, for example, the forced vaccinations of slaves, black infant mortality, and LGBT rights during the HIV pandemic. The project also plans to expand coverage of historiographical debates and introduce additional diseases such as polio and Ebola.
The podcast argues for the importance of the past’s complexity and the contingent and structural forces that shape human responses to infectious disease outbreaks. It aims to showcase that the past does not offer simple lessons that can be taken from history and simply applied in the present.
Afterlives of Pandemics, Past & Present
“Afterlives of Pandemics, Past & Present” is an initiative of Beyond Better, an interdisciplinary, multi-media public medical humanities effort that seeks to destabilize ableist narratives in American healthcare through oral history, storytelling, and art. The project asks, what can we learn about health, illness, disability, and society by looking at the current experiences of COVID-19 survivors alongside the past experiences of polio survivors from the mid-twentieth century? Using oral history and digital archival research, and in conjunction with the artistic vision of two solicited artists with disabilities, the project will collect and curate stories of survival from the current COVID-19 pandemic and juxtapose them with stories of survival from the mid-twentieth century polio epidemic in the U.S.
”Afterlives of Pandemics” will place stories of contemporary experiences into historical perspective and put them on our digital platforms at beyondbetter.org, and on our Instagram page (@thebeyondbetterproject). Original visual art works created by illustrators and animators from the disability community will help explore the experiences of interview participants.
Using the analytical lens of disability history as a way to move beyond the dichotomy of sick/well, the project will curate a series of individual stories and artistic interpretations that capture the historical continuities and departures that characterize the experience of epidemic disease in the minutes, days, weeks, months, and years after they touch people’s lives. It draws attention to the ways in which the afterlife of an epidemic disease continues to shape life in both intimate and very public ways, from the level of the individual, to the community, to society at large.
COVID-Calls podcast
COVID-Calls is a weekly public-facing podcast and historical archive project broadcast via Facebook Live, YouTube Live, and Periscope. Immediately following the live broadcast, the COVIDCalls episode is edited with music and breaks and archived as a podcast, made available via all major podcast platforms.
Created by Scott Gabriel Knowles of the Department of History, Drexel University, COVIDCalls aims to accomplish four goals: (1) Examining in depth topics related to the COVID-19 pandemic relevant to advancing public health, public engagement with history, public understanding of science, antiracism, and public engagement with high-quality social science/humanities research; (2) Amplification of relevant social science disaster research (broadly defined) conducted in the public interest, across disciplines, in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic; (3) Facilitating connectivity among disaster researchers and journalists/media professionals in order to bring high quality, in-depth social science into the hands of the working press; and (4) Collecting and disseminating a real-time historical archive of the COVID-19 pandemic as filtered through the lens of disaster research practitioners.
Pre-Existing Conditions: Pandemics as History
Historical Insights on Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19), the 1918 Influenza Pandemic, and Racial Disparities: Illuminating a Path Forward
Pandemic Syllabus
Created by three historians of public health, this reading list provides a range of voices and perspectives that give context not just to COVID-19 but also to the medical, scientific, cultural, political, and economic structures that shape this and other pandemics. They are structures that, beyond biology alone, are often what make pandemics selectively—and unequally—deadly.