Global History in 15 Epidemics: Contexts and Cultures
By (Author) Dr Andrew Robarts
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
11th December 2025
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
Infectious and contagious diseases
History of medicine
Paperback
240
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Infectious disease has been the biggest threat to human life throughout history, and specific outbreaks have imprinted themselves upon our collective memory for centuries. Drawing lessons from the past to help us grapple with current and future pandemics, Global History in 15 Epidemics focuses on the social, cultural and political dimensions of humanitys response to the rise and spread of epidemic diseases. Taking a global perspective, this text explores the transnational, environmental and technological factors that promote and sustain outbreaks of epidemic disease. From smallpox in colonial America to influenza in WWI, tuberculosis in the 19th century and covid-19 in the present day, this book seeks to understand the role played by factors such as climate, migration, imperialism, the environment and human-animal interactions. It also explores the development and evolution of quarantine, public health systems and vaccination to understand state-society responses and the political and legal dimensions of outbreaks. Asking how outbreaks interact with war, racism, cultural memory and social stigma, it takes a comparative approach, exploring how the same diseases were experienced differently depending on their geographical, political and cultural settings. Finally, it asks how these experiences have fed into cultural memory and explores how epidemics and pandemics have been, and continue to be, memorialized throughout time.
Andrew Robarts is Associate Professor of History at Rhode Island School of Design, USA, where he teaches disease in history. He is the author of Migration and Disease in the Black Sea Region: Ottoman and Russian Relations in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries (Bloomsbury, 2017).