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The Pandemic 3 | American Horror Stories II: Otherness in Memories of Pandemics, Past and Present

Thursday 10th December | 15:00 - 17:00 | Online

Series Overview

Pandemics and their attendant impact on the cultural and political fibre of societies have accompanied human civilisation since its earliest days. The Antoine Plague of 165 – 180 AD swept through the Roman empire claiming an estimated 5 million lives and may have spread into Han China around the same time. The Black Death of 1347 – 1351 claimed an estimated 30 – 50% (200 million) of Europe’s population and triggered huge cultural shifts and political unrest. The global HIV pandemic which began in the early 1980s is estimated to have killed between 25 and 35 million people and, absent a vaccine, continues to have a considerable impact on many countries.

Participants in this series will consider the following questions:

  • How have we understood ourselves in relation to these pandemics, not only as health emergencies, but as cultural and historical phenomena?

  • How have different pandemics challenged or solidified pre-existing social stratification and inequalities?

  • How have pre-existing or new discourses of sickness, disability, religion, and morality been mobilised during different pandemics and in the years that followed them?

  • To what extent have historical discourses on pandemics and infectious disease in general survived into our own time and to what effect?

  • In what ways do different societies ‘remember’ great pandemics?

3. American Horror Stories II: Otherness in Memories of Pandemics, Past and Present

Although the story of contagion is necessarily a story of connections between people, as Orhan Pamuk notes, “like evil itself, plague was always portrayed as something that had come from outside.” Smallpox was a key player in the European colonisation of the Americas and the genocidal obliteration of millions of indigenous peoples. The eighteenth-century notion that Black bodies were inherently different and deficient, either more susceptible or completely immune to diseases relative to white populations, survives in contemporary responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. The US’s long history of racism directed towards Asian and Asian-American populations has too been reignited during the current crisis, while Islamophobia still soaks red into the very fabric of the post-9/11 world.

In this webinar, we will consider:

  • Narratives of Otherness in the American imaginary of threat and contagion;

  • The relationship between literature and politics, and the role of the writer in a state of national emergency;

  • The impact of American protest-movement discourses across the world, from Black Lives Matter to QAnon.

By the end of the webinar, participants will be familiar with historical discourses on white supremacy in the US and will be invited to consider what lessons and consolations can be found in American narratives of Otherness.

This webinar will be delivered by Dr Maria-Irina Popescu, who holds a PhD in Literature from the University of Essex. Her thesis examined the portrayal of domestic terrorists in contemporary American novels. In November 2017, she co-curated a major postgraduate conference of the British Association for American Studies (BAAS) entitled ‘We Hold These Truths to Be Self Evident: Post-Truth and American Myths.’

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10 December

Auraldiversities: Listening in the Present Tense (Session 2)

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11 December

The Pandemic 4 | The Social Lives of Epidemics: Anthropological Perspectives from the West African Ebola Outbreak