Dreading the Worst When it Comes to Epidemics
A scientist by training, author Philip Alcabes studies the etymology of epidemiology and the cultural fears of worldwide disease
- By Abigail Tucker
- Smithsonian.com, April 28, 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
How did medieval epidemics help strengthen communities?
The era of the plague starts in Europe in the mid-1300s and goes to about the year 1700. One of the things that’s remarkable is that at the same time as there were these florid and violent responses that I write about -- the burning of the Jews and hounding people out of their homes and exiling them from the land -- there were also very cogent and thoughtful communitarian responses, like quarantine. Communities decided to protect themselves by preventing goods from coming in or people from coming in, which in essence were the beginnings of public health intervention.
In the 20th century, how did epidemics impact the status of marginalized ethnic groups like Jews in Europe and Irish immigrants and blacks in America?
One of the themes that threads through the history of thinking about epidemics is this idea of fear or suspicion of foreigners or outsiders, fears about people who don’t seem to fit in. The Black Death example is the Christian townspeople in Western Europe who seized on Jews as the cause. Now they basically knew Jews weren’t the cause of the plague, but in many places nonetheless they either ran the Jews out of town or beat them or burned them to death. It was an expression of some unconscious, or not-so-unconscious, fear that I think was really about the stability of society. Fortunately we don’t see so much burning at the stake anymore when there are epidemics. But there’s still an impulse to fix on foreigners and outsiders as being suspect, as being somehow responsible. With cholera in the mid- 19th century, the suspects were Irish immigrants. There was an outbreak of plague in San Francisco in 1900 that started in Chinatown. The plans for what to do about the plague were tied up with anti-immigrant sentiments, which focused on Chinese-Americans but also included Japanese-Americans.
How did dread of epidemics influence women’s place in society?
There are scholarly papers in peer-reviewed medical journals that attribute tuberculosis (in the 1920s) to the new trend of young women’s independence. Instead of staying home and finding a husband, they were going out, getting jobs, and particularly wearing abbreviated clothing. They go out, catch a chill and one thing leads to another, the thinking went. Was there real science behind this? Yes and no. But it really reflected a set of prejudices about women. You see that set of prejudices more generally in the context of sexually transmitted diseases. There’s a general implication that sexual women are dangerous in the history of disease control in America.
What fears did the AIDS epidemic reveal?
AIDS touched on a really essential tension that had to do with modernity or the nature of modern life toward the last quarter of 20th century. The public health profession was feeling like contagion had been conquered, or could be. In the 1970s small pox was eradicated, polio vaccines had diminished what had been a terrible scourge among children, there was vaccination for measles. It was a hopeful moment. At the same time that there was great faith in the advances of modernity, there was a feeling that maybe bad things were going to happen (because of modernity). That’s a persistent theme in western history, that something we’re doing, something that our parents or our grandparents didn’t do having to do with piety or sex or diet, somehow means we’ll “reap the whirlwind.” Then AIDS comes, and people talk about homosexual men like they're getting their comeuppance. Jerry Falwell even used that term about gay men “reaping the whirlwind.” As if something about the sexual revolution, the post-Stonewall moment, when people were able to come out as gay, had threatened society and society was now being punished. The response to AIDS was fraught with all sorts of ideas about what society was like, and a lot of that was about sex and sexuality, but more generally it was about the sexual revolution, the idea of tolerance of homosexuality, which was still a pretty new thing in those days. And it allowed people to talk about sex.
Can the post-9/11 anthrax “epidemic” be seen as a social coping mechanism?
Living in New York in the fall of 2001, I was really struck by a contrast of (reactions). On the one hand, the World Trade Center had fallen down, 2,700 fellow New Yorkers had just died, but the mood in the city was this kind of “keep on keeping on” circumspection. A month afterward there was the postal anthrax event, and the response to that was such a dramatic contrast. There were five deaths, and that’s sad and terrible for the families of the people who died – but that’s five, not 2,700. Yet in response to anthrax, people would come up to me and say “I’m ironing my mail” or “I’m not opening my mail at all.” Buildings got evacuated whenever somebody saw some white powder. I mean, it was nutty. You would have thought there would have been a nutty response to two iconic towers getting knocked down by planes, which seemed like a science fiction scenario, a horror story scenario. And yet the craziness was in response to anthrax.
Why don’t you think we should bother planning a great deal for the next plague?
We should plan very carefully for the things we know about. For instance, it seems reasonable that if you don’t inspect food supplies for contamination, some food will be contaminated and there will be outbreaks of salmonellosis. That’s the planning I would like to see be done. What concerns me more is the kind of planning that “this might happen” and “it might lead to that” and “it might lead to a third thing” -- scenarios that seem like a stretch. It's kind of like speculation times speculation. We need more real public health planning and less “preparedness.”
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Comments (5)
Thanks for publishing an article by someone with some common sense. We live in a world with enough hysterics, and perhaps I'm a bit of a Conspiracy theorist but it sort of reeks that most of the people crying "Plague" over flu sit on the boards of companies that make flu shorts. During the Spanish flu epidemic, the people who didn't get the killer strain are the people who got the bad flu the year before. Maybe we should have a little faith in nature. It's sad that people die, but people do die and to live in a culture where we fear the enevitable and worry over the possible rather then living in the actual and embracing the joyful is definately worse. Plan for what you can, accept the stuff you can't. Live is too short to waste trying to live forever.
Posted by Cindy Hutchins on September 25,2009 | 07:43 PM
The masks that people are wearing - are they protecting us from them or them from us. A "surgical" maks filters the exhale not the inhale - right?? So what is the need for a mask??
Posted by Rick on May 7,2009 | 10:13 PM
Very good article and responses on the H1N1.I think it was ovverblown by the media hype and scared so many. I am 83;had every childhood disease and shot for many more "bigs". Having worked for the USPHS for thirty years I saw my share of many viruses and the last one that I had ant direct experience with was HIV/AIDS which now though worldwide we now have drugs which extend the life span and somewhat control the disease. We will have other outbreaks of one kind or another and will have to face up to the fact that this is inevitable.
Posted by EDWIN GWALTNEY on May 7,2009 | 07:11 PM
Fascinating reading. Of course preventative medicine is all about risk. Do some people die because of a vaccine? Or do more people die from an epidemic? Life is always a trade off and none of us can predict the moment of our death with absolute certainty, but it is a certainty. Did people really panic over anthrax post 9/11 or was this just something they perceived they had some control over? After all, when all is said and done the catastrophe of the twin towers was out of the hands of most people - a horror magnified by the fact that so many watched helplessly as events transpired. White powder? We can deal with that. We can take precautions, we can imagine ourselves safe. Once again, when all is said and done however, viruses are utterly indifferent to the machinations of humans.
Posted by Kelly on May 5,2009 | 01:54 PM
I really enjoyed your article, agree with all you wrote. when I was younger most kids where sick with the flu, sore throats, fevers etc. They did not call these epidemics we fought of the virus and went on, kids would go to school sick with runny noses, coughs, etc if it was really bad the doctor gave us something to get better. We did not panic we took care of the cold, flu, or whatever it was. Panic causes more of a problem then people can imagine.
Posted by Judy on April 28,2009 | 12:41 PM