Literature DB >> 33775942

Spectacles of Difference: The Racial Scripting of Epidemic Disparities.

Keith Wailoo.   

Abstract

This essay explores how epidemics in the past and present give rise to distinctive, recurring racial scripts about bodies and identities, with sweeping racial effects beyond the Black experience. Using examples from cholera, influenza, tuberculosis, AIDS, and COVID-19, the essay provides a dramaturgical analysis of race and epidemics in four acts, moving from Act I, racial revelation; to Act II, the staging of bodies and places; to Act III, where race and disease is made into spectacle; and finally, Act IV, in which racial boundaries are fixed, repaired, or made anew in the response to the racial dynamics revealed by epidemics. Focusing primarily on North America but touching on global racial narratives, the essay concludes with reflections on the writers and producers of these racialized dramas, and a discussion of why these racialized repertoires have endured.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33775942     DOI: 10.1353/bhm.2020.0085

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull Hist Med        ISSN: 0007-5140            Impact factor:   1.314


  3 in total

1.  The data will not save us: Afropessimism and racial antimatter in the COVID-19 pandemic.

Authors:  Anthony Ryan Hatch
Journal:  Big Data Soc       Date:  2022-02-23

2.  Tuberculosis Disability Adjusted Life Years, Colombia 2010-2018.

Authors:  Laura Plata-Casas; Oscar Gutierrez-Lesmes; Favio Cala-Vitery
Journal:  Trop Med Infect Dis       Date:  2022-09-18

3.  Indigenous Peoples, tuberculosis research and changing ideas about race in the 1930s.

Authors:  Christian McMillen
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2021-11-01       Impact factor: 8.262

  3 in total

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