likenessThis series offers discussions with the editors and authors of a special issue of the Isis Current Bibliography. It provides perspectives into the state of current scholarship on the history of pandemics, and where the field might be heading in the future. For more information, and to access the special issue, see

https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/toc/isis/2023/114/S1.

The open peer review site can be found here: https://pandemics.isiscb.org.

Jump to:

  1. Introduction
  2. Fundamental Concepts in Understanding Pandemic Diseases
  3. The Social and Political Dimensions of Pandemic Diseases
  4. On Past, Present, and Possible Future, Pandemic Diseases

 

 

Neeraja Sankaran and Stephen P. Weldon introduce the series.

Get an inside view of the editorial decisions and motivations behind a special issue of the Isis Current Bibliography, which focuses on scholarship in the history of pandemics. The editors discuss several important topics, including their approach to making the special issue both open access and open peer review; their efforts to make their special issue global in scope; and their editorial management of scholarly collaboration.

 

Neeraja SankaranNeeraja Sankaran is a historian of science and medicine at the National Centre for Biological Sciences-TIFR, Bangalore, India. Her work focuses on the recent and near-contemporary history of biomedical sciences. An independent scholar since 2015, she has held both research and teaching positions at universities in different parts of the world, including the United States, Egypt, South Korea, India, the United Kingdom, and the Netherlands.

 

Stephen Weldon

Stephen P. Weldon is a historian of science at the University of Oklahoma. He is the author of The Scientific Spirit of American Humanism (Johns Hopkins Press, 2020) and is editor of the Isis Bibliography of the History of Science, the definitive bibliographical resource for the discipline, which goes back to 1913. In 2015, he established an online open access service called IsisCB Explore that allows anyone to search this database.

 

Closed-captioning available on YouTube.

Recorded August 29, 2022.

 

Fundamental Concepts in Understanding Pandemic Diseases

 

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Image courtesy of Stephen Weldon.

 

This episode of the series features contributors who wrote and reviewed bibliographic essays surveying the literature about concepts fundamental to our understanding of pandemic and epidemic diseases, such as the broad disciplinary category of epidemiology, as well as the concepts of vaccinations and syndemics. Offering their perspectives on the significance of these topics are: Lukas Engelmann, Jacob Steere-Williams and Dora Vargha. They discuss how historians can move away from a model of biography of disease and towards a better understanding of the co-occurrence of disease epidemics with epidemics of social phenomena.

 

likenessLukas Engelmann, University of Edinburgh.
 Author:
  1. A Short Bibliography of the History of Epidemiology
  2. Coinfection  Comorbidity, and Syndemics: On the Edges of Epidemic Historiography.
Reviewer:
  Emerging Infectious Diseases and Disease Emergence: Critical, Ontological and Epistemological Approaches
 
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Jacob Steere-Williams, College of Charleston
Reviewer:
  1. A Short Bibliography of the History of Epidemiology & Coinfection  Comorbidity
  2. The European Perspective on Pandemics: A Bibliographic Survey
 
 
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Dora Vargha, University of Exeter & Humboldt University, Berlin
Author, with Imogen Wilkins:
Vaccination and Pandemics

 

 

Closed-captioning available on YouTube.

Recorded April 24, 2023.

 

The Social and Political Dimensions of Pandemic Diseases

 

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Nicholas I of Russia quells a 'cholera riot' in St Petersburg
Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Following in the wake of the Isis CB special issue on pandemics, this episode of the companion podcast takes a deeper look at the societal contexts of pandemics, and also considers the impact of doing such a history during times of disease crises. Contributors Kavita Sivaramakrishnan, Keith Wailoo and Emily Hamilton share their insights and and experiences of taking stock of literature and also of the impact that COVID-19 had on their own scholarship and teaching. 

 

likenessKavita Sivaramakrishnan, Columbia University

Author, with Valentina Parisi: The Limits of Linearity: Recasting Histories of Epidemics in the Global South

Reviewer: Epidemic Inequities: Social and Racial Inequality in the History of Pandemics

 

likenessKeith Wailoo, Princeton University

Author, with Michael McGovern: Epidemic Inequities: Social and Racial Inequality in the History of Pandemics

 

 

likenessEmily Hamilton, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Author: Conclusion: What It Means

 

 

Closed-captioning available on YouTube.

 

Recorded October 19, 2023.

 

On Past, Present, and Possible Future, Pandemic Diseaseslikeness
 

This episode of the podcast companion to the Isis CB special issue on pandemics, focuses on the very substance of pandemics, namely the diseases themselves.  Join Mark Honigsbaum, Matheus Alves Duarte da Silva, and Michael Bresalier in a conversation about the impact of disease on history and on the condition of our planet vis-a-vis current diseases and those that may emerge, as well as the role and responsibility of the historian in dealing with pandemic incidents. 
 
likenessMark Honigsbaum, City University London
 
 
 
 
likenessMatheus Alves Duarte da Silva, University of St. Andrews
Reviewer: Vaccination and Pandemics
 
 
 
likenessMichael Bresalier, Swansea University
Reviewer: 
1) The “Spanish” Flu and the Pandemic Imaginary
2) Emerging Infectious Diseases and Disease Emergence: Critical, Ontological and Epistemological Approaches
 
 
 
Closed-captioning available on YouTube.

Recorded March 13, 2024.