71: Food's Role in the Spread of Past Diseases with Jessica Hider
AnthroDish17 Mar 2020

71: Food's Role in the Spread of Past Diseases with Jessica Hider

So this week is particularly heavy, and I don't feel right starting out this episode without addressing that. I have been thinking for a long time about the role of podcasting in pandemics, and whether it's silly to produce and share episodes when everyone's minds are riddled with panic, fear, and an ever-growing awareness of just how much food you have in your pantry.

But then I remembered that this show has ALWAYS been about us as a community. This isn't about me, it's about what we can offer each other in terms of sharing knowledge and experience. And right now, it's also about what I can offer you as a break from the endless Twitter feed refreshes and breaking news briefs. So we continue, and hope we can offer you a little peace and distraction, if only for a half hour.

So before I introduce our guest, I also want to share that my podcast is open for interview bookings to anyone who may have had to cancel a food-relate lecture or conference, or close your restaurant, or have been hard hit by these as someone working in the food industry in any capacity, please reach out and email anthrodish@gmail.com. I'd love to do a quick interview with you – just because we can't gather to support each other in person doesn't mean we can't still be celebrating hardworking people in our food systems!

Okay, so this week we're exploring the role of food in disease outbreaks with my friend and McMaster colleague, Jessica Hider. She's a PhD candidate in my anthropology department at McMaster and works in McMaster's uber-cool Ancient DNA Centre. Jess looks at the spread of pathogens in pre-Rome and ancient Rome. She combines ancient DNA analyses with bioarchaeology and paleopathology (or the study of ancient diseases and pathologies on bone). Her main focus and interest is a disease known as brucellosis – which is a lesser known but absolutely fascinating disease to explore. I will let her do the expert explaining on what it entails in the interview!

We're chatting about the differences between food-borne diseases, zoonotic diseases, and the ways that food can help spread disease in the past. For those of you who are really tired of hearing about COVID-19, don't worry – we don't really touch on it. But we do talk about Typhoid Mary, and she's a real hoot.

Learn More About Jess:

Episoder(185)

146: Flavour's Role in Food System Fixes with Franco Fubini

146: Flavour's Role in Food System Fixes with Franco Fubini

The idea of industrial food systems is flat, heavy, and feels complex to access. It brings up connotations of very bland, hyper-processed foods made to reach a large number of people at a low cost. Th...

12 Mar 202536min

145: Exploring the Biodiversity of Climate-Smart Crops with Shreema Mehta

145: Exploring the Biodiversity of Climate-Smart Crops with Shreema Mehta

Industrial food systems tend to use mono-crop and unilinear approaches to supplying the Global North with food. But what happens when we consider more diverse crops? My guest today, Shreema Mehta, wil...

4 Mar 202525min

144: The Rich History of Georgian Wines with Sarah May Grunwald

144: The Rich History of Georgian Wines with Sarah May Grunwald

When it comes to wine, I have a tendency to retreat and panic: I don't know anything, and I certainly don't feel like I have the means to access the knowledge. I often wonder if that's a common experi...

25 Feb 202553min

143: Unpacking the Absent Food Citizen in Policy with Isabela Bonnevera

143: Unpacking the Absent Food Citizen in Policy with Isabela Bonnevera

This week, we're exploring the idea of the food citizen, or perhaps more accurately, the absent food citizen, with Isabela Bonnevera. Isabela is a doctoral researcher at ICTA-UAB, and engages with par...

18 Feb 202539min

142: What Role Does Food Play in Fiction Writing? with Margaux Vialleron

142: What Role Does Food Play in Fiction Writing? with Margaux Vialleron

One of the most frustrating parts of watching Gossip Girl growing up was witnessing the elaborate breakfast spreads that the families had each morning, only for the main characters to grab a piece of ...

26 Nov 202432min

141: Uncovering Medieval Pictish Foodways through Paleobotany with Dr. Shalen Prado

141: Uncovering Medieval Pictish Foodways through Paleobotany with Dr. Shalen Prado

Oftentimes, when we think about plant-human relationships, we're thinking about our contemporary lives and how plants factor into it – be it North American plant-based diets or what we're growing in o...

19 Nov 202433min

140: Recovering from Restrictive Online Diet Myths with Dr. Sarah Ballantyne

140: Recovering from Restrictive Online Diet Myths with Dr. Sarah Ballantyne

Diet culture on the internet is excellent at sensationalizing our food to the point of panic. I'm sure many of you have seen the videos across TikTok and Instagram where someone positions themselves a...

12 Nov 202442min

139: What Makes for Good Food Policy? with Chef Joshna Maharaj

139: What Makes for Good Food Policy? with Chef Joshna Maharaj

One downside I find when I spend too much time on the internet is that there's an overwhelming viewpoint that the system is broken and there's not much we can do to change that – or that food, in gene...

5 Nov 202448min

Populært innen Samfunn

rss-spartsklubben
giver-og-gjengen-vg
aftenpodden
konspirasjonspodden
aftenpodden-usa
popradet
rss-nesten-hele-uka-med-lepperod
rss-henlagt-andy-larsgaard
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
min-barneoppdragelse
grenselos
wolfgang-wee-uncut
synnve-og-vanessa
rss-dette-ma-aldri-skje-igjen
rss-espen-lee-usensurert
fladseth
frokostshowet-pa-p5
alt-fortalt
relasjonspodden-med-dora-thorhallsdottir-kjersti-idem
rss-dannet-uten-piano