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What’s changed since the 1918 pandemic? (A history lesson with Nancy Bristow)

What’s changed since the 1918 pandemic? (A history lesson with Nancy Bristow)

FromPitchfork Economics with Nick Hanauer


What’s changed since the 1918 pandemic? (A history lesson with Nancy Bristow)

FromPitchfork Economics with Nick Hanauer

ratings:
Length:
21 minutes
Released:
Apr 17, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

How does our response to the coronavirus pandemic compare to our response 100 years ago, when what is commonly known as the “Spanish Flu” swept through America? Historian Nancy Bristow helps Annie understand the lessons American society learned from the 1918 influenza epidemic, and what we haven’t yet gotten right. 

Nancy Bristow is the History Department Chair at the University of Puget Sound, where she teaches twentieth-century American history with an emphasis on race, gender, and social change. She is the author of ‘American Pandemic: The Lost Worlds of the 1918 Influenza Epidemic’. 

Twitter: @univpugetsound
@NancyKBristow

Further reading: 
American Pandemic on Bookshop.org, an independent site that’s raising money for independent bookstores that are closed during the pandemic: https://bookshop.org/books/american-pandemic-the-lost-worlds-of-the-1918-influenza-epidemic/9780190238551

Or on IndieBound: https://www.indiebound.org/book/9780190238551

Cities that went all in on social distancing in 1918 emerged stronger for it: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/04/03/upshot/coronavirus-cities-social-distancing-better-employment.html

Website: http://pitchforkeconomics.com/
Twitter: @PitchforkEcon
Instagram: @pitchforkeconomics
Nick’s twitter: @NickHanauer
Released:
Apr 17, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Any society that allows itself to become radically unequal eventually collapses into an uprising or a police state—or both. Join venture capitalist Nick Hanauer and some of the world’s leading economic and political thinkers in an exploration of who gets what and why. Turns out, everything you learned about economics is wrong. And if we don’t do something about rising inequality, the pitchforks are coming.