ABSTRACT

Until recently, plagues were thought to belong in the ancient past. Now there are deep worries about global pandemics. This book presents views from anthropology about this much publicized and complex problem. The authors take us to places where epidemics are erupting, waning, or gone, and to other places where they have not yet arrived, but where a frightening story line is already in place. They explore public health bureaucracies and political arenas where the power lies to make decisions about what is, and is not, an epidemic. They look back into global history to uncover disease trends and look ahead to a future of expanding plagues within the context of climate change. The chapters are written from a range of perspectives, from the science of modeling epidemics to the social science of understanding them. Patterns emerge when people are engulfed by diseases labeled as epidemics but which have the hallmarks of plague. There are cycles of shame and blame, stigma, isolation of the sick, fear of contagion, and end-of-the-world scenarios. Plague, it would seem, is still among us.

chapter two|17 pages

Ecosyndemics

Global Warming and the Coming Plagues of the Twenty-first Century

chapter three|21 pages

Pressing Plagues

On the Mediated Communicability of Virtual Epidemics

chapter four|20 pages

On Creating Epidemics, Plagues, and Other Wartime Alarums and Excursions

Enumerating versus Estimating Civilian Mortality in Iraq

chapter six|23 pages

Deconstructing an Epidemic

Cholera in Gibraltar

chapter seven|18 pages

The End of a Plague?

Tuberculosis in New Zealand

chapter eight|16 pages

Epidemics and Time

Influenza and Tuberculosis during and after the 1918–1919 Pandemic

chapter nine|25 pages

Everyday Mortality in the Time of Plague

Ordinary People in Massachusetts before and during the 1918 Influenza Epidemic

chapter eleven|20 pages

Past into Present

History and the Making of Knowledge about HIV/Aids and Aboriginal People

chapter twelve|18 pages

Accounting for Epidemics

Mathematical Modeling and Anthropology

chapter fourteen|17 pages

From Plague, an Epidemic Comes

Recounting Disease as Contamination and Configuration

chapter fifteen|17 pages

Making Plagues Visible

Yellow Fever, Hookworm, and Chagas' Disease, 1900–1950

chapter seventeen|18 pages

"Steady with Custom"

Mediating HIV Prevention in the Trobriand Islands, Papua New Guinea

chapter eighteen|22 pages

Explaining Kuru

Three Ways to Think about an Epidemic