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Plague (II): Responses and Measures

By Frank Snowden - Yale
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Lecture Description

Community responses to the bubonic plague ranged from the flight of a privileged few to widespread panic and the persecution of foreigners and other stigmatized social groups. The suspicion of willful human agency in spreading the disease, identified with the work of poisoners, was a major source of anxiety. Mass religious revivals also accompanied the pandemic, with the emergence of new cults of saints and public forms of repentance. Official attempts to contain the second pandemic resulted in the first full-scale public health program, the plague regulations instituted by the Italian city-states, regulations that included military quarantines, compulsory burial, and imprisonment of the infected. It is unclear to what extent these measures, while representative of impressive technical and administrative advances, actually contributed to defeating the epidemic.

Course Description

Course Index

  1. Introduction to the Course
  2. Classical Views of Disease: Hippocrates, Galen, and Humoralism
  3. Plague (I): Pestilence as Disease
  4. Plague (II): Responses and Measures
  5. Plague (III): Illustrations and Conclusions
  6. Smallpox (I): 'The Speckled Monster'
  7. Smallpox (II): Jenner, Vaccination, and Eradication
  8. Nineteenth-Century Medicine: The Paris School of Medicine
  9. Asiatic Cholera (I): Personal Reflections
  10. Asiatic Cholera (II): Five Pandemics
  11. The Sanitary Movement and the 'Filth Theory of Disease'
  12. Syphilis: From the "Great Pox" to the Modern Version
  13. Contagionism versus Anticontagionism
  14. The Germ Theory of Disease
  15. Tropical Medicine as a Discipline
  16. Malaria (I): The Case of Italy
  17. Malaria (II): The Global Challenge
  18. Tuberculosis (I): The Era of Consumption
  19. Tuberculosis (II): After Robert Koch
  20. Pandemic Influenza
  21. The Tuskegee Experiment
  22. AIDS (I)
  23. AIDS (II)
  24. Poliomyelitis: Problems of Eradication
  25. SARS, Avian Inluenza, and Swine Flu: Lessons and Prospects
  26. Final Q&A