Listening to Covid-19: Oral Histories of New York in Pandemic Wednesday, September 23rd Z-Panel | 4:30PM EDT

Main Article Content

Denise Milstein
Ryan Hagen

Abstract

 
Event Video
https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/d8-sn4k-y627

 


Denise Milstein, Director MA Program in Sociology, Columbia University


Ryan Hagen, Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Sociology, Columbia University



The COVID-19 pandemic is the gravest infectious disease crisis the United States has faced since the Influenza pandemic of 1918, and we fear that it will not be the last. This panel will feature the work we are developing with a team of sociologists, oral historians, and anthropologists at Columbia University’s INCITE and the Oral History Archives at Columbia to archive and document New York City’s experience of the pandemic.


New York City was the early epicenter of this pandemic in the United States because of its international connections and the local density of its social and urban life. The virus spreads most intensely in households, workplaces, and neighborhoods. In this panel, we will explain some of the early oral histories we conducted as the pandemia hit hard in the Spring and Summer of 2020 and the conclusions drawn from them thereafter. Our growing archive focuses on New York—a city of neighborhoods—to illuminate and document the social and urban structure of the pandemic. We will discuss the particular methods of oral history, the role of storytelling and diary writing in public experiences of health, and how this form of social research and humanistic reflection can help us understand relationships between health, the city, and social inequity—relationships made ever so urgent in times of pandemia and uniquely captured in the voices of those who lived through the period.


 

Article Details

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Past
How to Cite
Milstein, D. ., & Hagen, R. . (2020). Listening to Covid-19: Oral Histories of New York in Pandemic: Wednesday, September 23rd Z-Panel | 4:30PM EDT. Care for the Polis. Retrieved from https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/careforpolis/article/view/7081