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

Avsnitt(185)

154: Episode 10 Launch! [SOLO Episode]

154: Episode 10 Launch! [SOLO Episode]

A solo episode to kickstart season 10 of AnthroDish - exploring diverse themes of community this year relating to food, culture, and identity.  Website: https://www.anthrodish.com Newsletter: https:/...

7 Okt 20258min

153: Setting a Place for Recipes of  Displacement & Community with Hawa Hassan

153: Setting a Place for Recipes of Displacement & Community with Hawa Hassan

As season 9 of the podcast draws to a close, it's feeling like a full circle moment thematically. The conversations began this season around what it means to value labour, specifically whose labour is...

20 Maj 202532min

152: Documenting the Undocumented through Food with Jill Damatac

152: Documenting the Undocumented through Food with Jill Damatac

The idea of a pristine kitchen with clean countertops feels distinctively American, or an all-American idealist. However, the concept of the American ideal, or the American dream, desperately needs to...

6 Maj 202530min

151: What Can Local and Seasonal Food Networks Look Like? with Colin Fontaine

151: What Can Local and Seasonal Food Networks Look Like? with Colin Fontaine

Perhaps now more than ever, there's renewed appreciation for the intricacies of our food systems' deep dependence on a global supply chain. However, that also raises challenges around our relationship...

29 Apr 202528min

150: Italian Pasta Nights with an American Accent with Renato Poliafito

150: Italian Pasta Nights with an American Accent with Renato Poliafito

Throughout this season, we've been exploring immigrant narratives around food: roles in food systems, labour, and diasporic food stories. Part of this is making sense of the "ish" elements to identiti...

22 Apr 202531min

149: Unbottling the Problems of Bottled Water with Daniel Jaffee

149: Unbottling the Problems of Bottled Water with Daniel Jaffee

A plastic bottle of water powerfully represents the state of our current environmental and health priorities. That water can become commodified while being an essential public service means that who g...

15 Apr 202557min

148: Masala, Maíz, and Movement - Ingredients for Decolonizing Plates with Norma Listman and Saqib Keval

148: Masala, Maíz, and Movement - Ingredients for Decolonizing Plates with Norma Listman and Saqib Keval

On the show today are Norma Listman and Saqib Keval, looking at the solutions and communities that can be built when activism and ethical values are at the forefront of food creation. Norma and Saqib ...

1 Apr 202538min

147: What Canada Ate - The Role of Cookbooks in Culinary History with Dr. Rebecca Beausaert

147: What Canada Ate - The Role of Cookbooks in Culinary History with Dr. Rebecca Beausaert

As most historians will tell you, the past can help make sense of a lot of the present, but maybe in unexpected or novel ways—like through cookbooks! We're living in an intense period (I probably alwa...

18 Mars 202534min

Populärt inom Samhälle & Kultur

en-mork-historia
podme-dokumentar
gynning-berg
p3-dokumentar
svenska-fall
aftonbladet-krim
skaringer-nessvold
mardromsgasten
hor-har
creepypodden-med-jack-werner
killradet
kod-katastrof
flashback-forever
blenda-2
p3-historia
rss-nemo-moter-en-van
vad-blir-det-for-mord
historiska-brott
rss-brottsutredarna
rss-mer-an-bara-morsa