Epidemics, Endemics, and Pandemics in World History provides a comprehensive account of human interactions with diseases from the stone age to COVID-19. It takes a thematic approach, exploring the two-way relationship between pathogens and human development throughout history.
Epidemics, Endemics, and Pandemics in World History provides a comprehensive account of human interactions with diseases from the stone age to COVID-19. It takes a thematic approach, exploring the two-way relationship between pathogens and human development throughout history.
The book argues that changing patterns of human activity, including the adoption of agriculture, warfare, long-distance exchange and globalization, industrialization, and imperialism created new opportunities for the proliferation of pathogens. It shows how disease threats in prehistory drove the evolution of the behavioral immune system and inspired human populations to develop disease “constructs” of culturally specific beliefs for defining, explaining, and combating dangerous diseases. The volume also explores how endemic diseases contribute to impoverishment and how poverty can be an exacerbating factor for infectious disease.
With suggested readings and discussion questions, this book is a valuable tool for all students interested in the history of disease across the world including those in global health.
1. Introduction to Disease,
2. Disease and Agriculture, Part 1: From
Prehistoric Pandemics to the Black Death,
3. Disease and Globalization, Part
2: The Columbian Exchange.
4. Disease and Globalization,
5. Europe from the
Epidemiological Transition to Industrialization, Part 3: European
Imperialism.
6. Disease and Globalization,
7. Disease and Warfare.
8. Disease
and Poverty in the Modern Era
Benjamin Reilly is a Teaching Professor of History and one of the founding faculty members of Carnegie Mellon Universitys campus in Qatar. An environmental historian, Dr. Reilly is particularly interested in how humans interact with natural processes, especially disasters and infectious diseases.