Pathogenesis
A History of the World in Eight Plagues
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
A sweeping examination of how germs have played a starring role in the most significant transformations in history, from the rise of Homo sapiens to the creation of world religions and the birth of capitalism.
According to the accepted narrative of progress, humans have thrived thanks to their brains and brawn, to actions undertaken individually and collectively that have changed the arc of history. In this revelatory book, sociologist and public health professor Jonathan Kennedy argues that the peddlers of the exceptionalism myth massively overestimate the role that reason plays in social change. Instead, it is the humble microbe that wins wars and topples empires.
Drawing on the latest research in genetics, economics, sociology, and anthropology, Pathogenesis explores eight outbreaks of infectious disease that made the modern world. Take the rise of Christianity. When a wave of deadly pandemics swept through the Roman Empire in the third century, there were only a small number of Christian communities—but they did a much better job tending to the sick. Their more communal approach saved thousands of lives, and helped turn this tiny, obscure sect into one of the world's great religions. Bacteria and viruses were also responsible for the demise of the Neanderthals, the growth of Islam, the transition from feudalism to capitalism, the devastation wrought by European colonialism, and the rise of the United States from an imperial backwater to a global superpower.
By centering disease in his wide-ranging, spectacularly illustrated history of humankind, Kennedy challenges our most fundamental assumptions about our collective past—and urges us to view our current moment as another disease-driven inflection point that could change the course of history. Provocative and brimming with insight, Pathogenesis transforms our understanding of the human story.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Revisiting the theme of William H. McNeill's Plagues and Peoples (1976), sociologist and public health scholar Kennedy debuts with a virtuoso analysis of the fallout from encounters between deadly viral and bacterial pathogens and human populations that lacked immunity. Looking back to prehistory, he argues that Homo sapiens supplanted Eurasian Neanderthals 40,000 years ago by virtue of pathogens they brought from Africa, not superior intelligence. Elsewhere, he contends that epidemics depopulated the Roman Empire and led to the rise of Christianity and Islam, while the Black Death initiated Britain's transition from feudalism to capitalism. A smallpox epidemic allowed Hernan Cortés to conquer the immunologically naive Aztec Empire in 1520, but Africa's endemic malaria killed Europeans so quickly that they were unable to colonize the continent until quinine became available in the 19th century. And while modern sanitation and medicine have triumphed over cholera and other pathogens, Covid-19 highlighted the "stark inequalities" that still result in millions of poor and marginalized people dying each year from preventable infections. Though there's a one-size-fits-all aspect to Kennedy's thesis that disease-bearing microbes are responsible for the modern world, he marshals a wealth of surprising scholarship in lucid and succinct prose. The result is a fascinating look at history from the perspective of its tiniest protagonists.