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We want to hear from you! Help shape the future of History Shorts by taking our quick 2-minute survey: Take a 2-Minute Listener Survey! Your feedback means the world to us, and you might get a shoutout in a future episode!
In this episode of History Shorts, we're joined by Dr. Kathryn Olivarius, historian and author of Necropolis: Disease, Power, and Capitalism in the Cotton Kingdom. Her work unveils the chilling and lesser-known reality of how yellow fever shaped the antebellum South, not just as a disease, but as a tool of power, privilege, and control.
We explore how elites in New Orleans and other parts of the Deep South leveraged immunity to the deadly virus as a form of capital, how public health was weaponized to uphold slavery and white supremacy, and what this forgotten epidemic tells us about the intersections of disease, race, and economics, then and now.
In this conversation, we cover:
The concept of "immunocapital" and why surviving yellow fever was a form of social currency
How disease policy in New Orleans bolstered plantation slavery and racial hierarchy
Parallels between past and present epidemics—COVID-19, social privilege, and health disparity
What it means to build a society that accepts death among the poor as the cost of doing business
SUBSCRIBE, LEAVE A REVIEW, OR A RATING!
SUPPORT THE SHOW: https://www.patreon.com/c/HistoryShortsPodcast
LEARN MORE: https://www.historyshortspodcast.com/
BUY Kathryn's book!
EPISODE SPONSOR: https://www.thecollector.com/
Peter's This Week's Top Picks from The Collector:
By History Shorts4.7
3131 ratings
We want to hear from you! Help shape the future of History Shorts by taking our quick 2-minute survey: Take a 2-Minute Listener Survey! Your feedback means the world to us, and you might get a shoutout in a future episode!
In this episode of History Shorts, we're joined by Dr. Kathryn Olivarius, historian and author of Necropolis: Disease, Power, and Capitalism in the Cotton Kingdom. Her work unveils the chilling and lesser-known reality of how yellow fever shaped the antebellum South, not just as a disease, but as a tool of power, privilege, and control.
We explore how elites in New Orleans and other parts of the Deep South leveraged immunity to the deadly virus as a form of capital, how public health was weaponized to uphold slavery and white supremacy, and what this forgotten epidemic tells us about the intersections of disease, race, and economics, then and now.
In this conversation, we cover:
The concept of "immunocapital" and why surviving yellow fever was a form of social currency
How disease policy in New Orleans bolstered plantation slavery and racial hierarchy
Parallels between past and present epidemics—COVID-19, social privilege, and health disparity
What it means to build a society that accepts death among the poor as the cost of doing business
SUBSCRIBE, LEAVE A REVIEW, OR A RATING!
SUPPORT THE SHOW: https://www.patreon.com/c/HistoryShortsPodcast
LEARN MORE: https://www.historyshortspodcast.com/
BUY Kathryn's book!
EPISODE SPONSOR: https://www.thecollector.com/
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