covidcalls
COVIDCalls
A daily discussion of the COVID-19 pandemic with a diverse collection of disaster experts - hosted by Dr. Scott Gabriel Knowles, a historian of disasters at Drexel University in Philadelphia.
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covidcalls
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Último episodio
8 de ene. de 2024
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Episodios
EP #478 - 3.15.2022 - Restoring Memory: Visualizing COVID 23.03.2022 50:35
My name is Scott Gabriel Knowles, I am a historian of disasters and since March 16, 2020 the host of COVIDCalls, a daily discussion of the pandemic with a diverse collection of disaster experts. Shannon Mattern is Professor at The New School for Social Research. Her writing and teaching focus on media architectures and infrastructures and spatial epistemologies. She has written books about librari...
EP #477 - 3.15.2022 - Restoring Memory: Marked by COVID & Faces of COVID 21.03.2022 59:56
Alex Goldstein created Faces of COVID. He is currently CEO of the strategic communications firm 90 West, which he founded in 2016 to better serve companies, organizations, and leaders that are making a positive impact on the world -- with a focus on equity, economic mobility, and the climate crisis. Kristin Urquiza, is the Co-founder, and Chief Activist of Marked by COVID. Kristin is a graduate o...
EP #476 - 3.15.2022 - Restoring Memory: A Pandemic of Racism 21.03.2022 52:06
I’d like to talk about racial justice, disaster recovery, and the pandemic with some of the experts I’ve been honored to get to know these past 2 years. Let me introduce them: Joy Banner, Ph. D. is the Director of Media and Marketing at Whitney Plantation. She is a native, and resident of Wallace, LA and a descendant of Whitney Plantation. Inspired both by Whitney Plantation’s mission and her desi...
EP #475 - 3.15.2022 - Restoring Memory: The Terrible Springtime 20.03.2022 28:45
Zachary Loeb is a PhD candidate whose work looks at the intersection of the history of technology and disaster studies, his dissertation project focuses on Y2K. Since March 16, 2020, he has posted 4 short poems a day (5 days a week) to the Twitter account @plaguepoems (these poems are then compiled into weekly compendiums that are posted at librarianshipwreck.wordpress.com ).
EP #474 - 3.15.2022 - Restoring Memory: A Performance by John Gorka 20.03.2022 50:19
In 2021 I saw that John Gorka, was performing a virtual concert—so I bought tickets, set up a video projector, and watched him in my living room with my wife and my two boys. It was a moment of light in a dark time. So, when it came time to put together Restoring Memory: A COVIDCalls exploration of the first 2 COVID years, I took a chance and reached out—and well, he’s here! From New Jersey, Joh...
EP #473 - 3.15.2022 - Restoring Memory: Premonitions and Origins 20.03.2022 1:06:52
For The Conversation TODAY I have three experts—return guests to COVIDCalls—to talk about Premonitions and Origins of COVID-19. Monica H. Green is a historian of medicine, currently serving as SOO-PEES Suppes Visiting Professor of the History of Science at Stanford University. She specializes in the premodern period and global infectious diseases. She is writing a book on the Black Death that draw...
EP #470 - 3.14.2022 - Pandemic Films 19.03.2022 1:24:29
Today I welcome Comparative Literature and Film Studies scholar Alain Cohen to talk about the film Contagion. Alain J.-J. Cohen is Professor of Comparative Literature and Film Studies at the University of California, San Diego where he has spent his career. He is also a practicing psychoanalyst, member of the San Diego Psychoanalytic Center, the American Psychoanalytic Association and the Internat...
EP #469 - 3.14.2022 - The History of Technology and COVID w/Asif Siddiqi 19.03.2022 52:07
Today I welcome historian of science and technology Asif Siddiqi. Asif Siddiqi is a professor of history at Fordham University in New York. He writes and teaches on both the history of technology and modern Russian history, as well as the intersection of the two. He has written many books and articles on the history of space exploration, including the Red Rockets’ Glare: Spaceflight and the Soviet...
EP #468 - 3.13.2022 - Mothers and Grandmothers in the Pandemic 16.03.2022 1:10:53
Today I welcome my stepmother Harriet Knowles and my mother in law Susan Meurling to talk about their lives during the pandemic. Harriet Knowles is a native Texan, having been born and raised out in West Texas in the town of Midland. She had an unique experience in her high school education in that her father was her school principal. Harriet attended Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas a...
EP #467 - 3.13.2022 - Brothers and Sisters in the Pandemic Part II 16.03.2022 1:02:29
Today I welcome my brothers and sisters back to COVIDCalls. My sisters and brothers: Lindy Warner, Stephanie Eddleton, Jennifer Lerma, Jeff Knowles, and David Vieira.
EP #466 - 3.12.2022 - COVID and Humanitarian Aid w/Julia Irwin 12.03.2022 1:17:21
Today I welcome historian of the Red Cross and humanitarian disaster relief Julia Irwin. Julia Irwin is Associate Professor and Associate Chair in the department of history at the University of South Florida. Her research focuses on the place of humanitarianism and foreign assistance in 20th century U.S. foreign relations and international history. Her first book, Making the World Safe: The Ame...
EP #465 - 3.11.2022 - The Architecture of COVID 12.03.2022 1:14:41
Today I welcome Daniel Barber, Jeannette KWO Kuo, and Paul Lewis to discuss architecture and design in the COVID era. Daniel A. Barber is Associate Professor of Architecture at the University of Pennsylvania Weitzman School of Design, where he is also Chair of the interdisciplinary PhD Program in Architecture. His most recent book is Modern Architecture and Climate: Design before Air Conditioning ...
EP #464 - 3.10.2022 - Disasters in Tonga 11.03.2022 46:32
Today I welcome Pacific Island journalist and scholar Lagipoiva Cherelle Jackson to talk about the winter 2022 Tonga volcanic eruption and tsunami and COVID. Lagipoiva Cherelle Jackson is a leading climate change journalist and scholar with a focus on small islands, gender, environmental negotiations and human rights. Lagipoiva Cherelle brings deep experience in Pacific Islands journalism and medi...
EP #463 - 3.10.2022 - COVID, Disinformation, and Disaster w/Kate Starbird 11.03.2022 48:44
Today is a discussion of DISINFORMATION IN THE PANDEMIC with returning COVIDCalls guest Kate Starbird. Kate Starbird is an Associate Professor at the Department of Human Centered Design & Engineering (HCDE) at the University of Washington (UW). Kate’s research is situated within human-computer interaction and the emerging field of crisis informatics—the study of the how social media and other info...
EP #462 - 3.10.2022 - Ukraine and COVID w/Maxym Prytula 10.03.2022 48:44
Today I welcome Maxym Prytula to discuss COVID in Ukraine. Maxym Prytula is a peridontist and oral surgeon in Ukraine where he is also working towards a PhD in public health administration. He has been treating COVID patients and soldiers, and we talk to him today.
EP #461 - 3.10.2022 - Disasters and COVID in Latin America w/Mark Healey 10.03.2022 1:16:24
Today I welcome historian of Latin America and disaster, Mark Healey. Mark Healey is an urban, environmental, and political historian of Latin America, and also a fellow disaster scholar. The author of “The Ruins of the New Argentina” (Duke, 2011), he is currently writing a book about the environmental and political history of water in the drylands of Argentina, as well as a project about the tran...
EP #460 - 3.9.2022 - The Pandemic Imaginary w/Christos Lynteris 09.03.2022 57:52
Today I welcome medical anthropologist Christos Lynteris back to COVIDCalls. Christos Lynteris is a medical anthropologist, and senior lecture at the Univ. of St. Andrews in the UK. His research focuses on the anthropological and historical examination of epidemics, zoonosis, epidemiological epistemology, medical visual culture, colonial medicine, and epidemics as events posing an existential risk...
EP #459 - 3.9.2022 - War, Refugees, and the Pandemic w/Deborah Amos 09.03.2022 47:11
Today I welcome Deborah Amos, NPR middle east correspondent and journalism professor at Princeton University. Deborah Amos is an award-winning international correspondent for NPR News, which regularly features her groundbreaking reporting on the Middle East and refugees in the United States on Morning Edition, Weekend Edition, and All Things Considered. Amos previously reported for ABC’s Nightline...
EP #458 - 3.9.2022 - Ukraine and Disaster: Past & Present 09.03.2022 29:45
Today I welcome historian John Vsetecka to discuss Ukrainian history and the war going on in Ukraine today. John Vsetecka is a PhD Candidate in the Department of History at Michigan State University where he is writing a dissertation on the 1932-1933 famine (Holodomor) and the 1946-1947 famine in Soviet Ukraine. He is the founder and one of the current editors of H-Ukraine--part of the larger H-Ne...
EP #457 - 3.8.2022 - Science and the Pandemic: Followup w/Laura Helmuth 09.03.2022 52:51
Today I welcome Laura Helmuth editor in chief of Scientific American. Laura Helmuth is the Editor in Chief of Scientific American. She has previously been an editor for The Washington Post, National Geographic, Slate, Smithsonian, and Science’s news section. She serves on the boards of High Country News, Spectrum and SciLine and is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medi...
EP #456 - 3.8.2022 - COVID and Mental Health w/Jessi Gold 09.03.2022 53:34
Today, I welcome Jessi Gold, Director of the Wellness Engagement and Outreach Department and the Department of Psychiatry at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. Jessi Gold, MD, MS, is an Assistant Professor and the Director of Wellness, Engagement, and Outreach in the Department of Psychiatry at Washington University School of Medicine in Saint Louis. She is a nationally recogn...
EP #455 - 3.8.2022 - Public Health in a Historical Perspective w/Michael Yudell 09.03.2022 46:09
Today I welcome public health ethicist and historian Michael Yudell. Michael Yudell is vice dean and professor in the ASU college if health solutions. He is a public health ethicist and award-winning historian whose work focuses on the history and ethics of genomics, the history of the race concept, and the history and ethics of autism research Yudell is the author of Race Unmasked: Biology and...
EP #454 - 3.8.2022 - The Pandemic’s True Death Toll 08.03.2022 57:13
Today I welcome journalist David Adam to discuss his Nature article “The pandemic’s true death toll: millions more than official counts” David Adam is a best-selling author and an award-winning journalist, who covers science, environment, technology, medicine and the impact they have on people, culture and society.
EP #453 - 3.7.2022 - Promise House: Heather’s Story w/Krista Rowe 08.03.2022 55:01
Today I welcome actor and film maker Krista Rowe to talk about her new film Promise House Heather’s Story. Originally from Arlington, Texas, Krista Rowe is an independent filmmaker, producer, director, and actress. She produced three seasons of the reality road trip cooking show American Food Battle with Helsinki based Mogul Media, for the AWE network and National Geographic Channel. She also prod...
EP #452 - 3.7.2022 - American Pandemic Culture w/James McWilliams 08.03.2022 1:24:23
Today I welcome historian James McWilliams to talk about American culture in the pandemic. James McWilliams, is currently writing a biography of the southern poet Frank Stanford. He's written about a wide range of interests, including the American South, food and agriculture, animal ethics, memory, and the poetics of place. His work has appeared in literary venues ranging from Runner's World to Th...
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