Thomas Andrews, University of Colorado

Newberry Library (Chicago, IL)

Friday, March 2, 2018, 8:00 pm EST
60 West Walton Street Chicago, Illinois 60610 

This event is part of the Center for American History and Culture Seminar Programs History of Capitalism Seminar

 

In fall 1872, a virulent disease spread from Canada to the Northeastern United States. By the following spring, the so-called “epizootic” had afflicted horses, mules, and other creatures throughout North America and the Caribbean. Though the disease-later identified as a form of influenza-rarely proved fatal, it nonetheless contributed to the economic modernization of the U.S. by reinforcing new understandings of epidemiology and prompting new concerns about industrial capitalism’s deep and ongoing dependence on animal power.

 

Newberry Scholarly Seminars are pre-circulated. For a copy of the paper, email scholarlyseminars@newberry.org. Please do not request a paper unless you plan to attend.