Influenza 1918: Disease, Death, and Struggle in Winnipeg

Voorkant
University of Toronto Press, 8 dec 2007 - 240 pagina's

The influenza pandemic of 1918-1919 killed as many as fifty million people worldwide and affected the vast majority of Canadians. Yet the pandemic, which came and left in one season, never to recur in any significant way, has remained difficult to interpret. What did it mean to live through and beyond this brief, terrible episode, and what were its long-term effects?

Influenza 1918 uses Winnipeg as a case study to show how disease articulated abd helped to re-define boundaries of social difference. Esyllt W. Jones examines the impact of the pandemic in this fragmented community, including its role in the eruption of the largest labour confrontation in Canadian history, the Winnipeg General Strike of 1919. Arguing that labour historians have largely ignored the impact of infectious disease upon the working class, Jones draws on a wide range of primary sources including mothers' allowance and orphanage case files in order to trace the pandemic's affect on the family, the public health infrastructure, and other social institutions. This study brings into focus the interrelationships between epidemic disease and working class, gender, labour, and ethnic history in Canada.

Influenza 1918 concludes that social conflict is not an inevitable outcome of epidemics, but rather of inequality and public failure to fully engage all members of the community in the fight against disease.

 

Inhoudsopgave

Introduction
3
Influenza Spans the Globe
13
Social History and Public Health
24
Influenza in Winnipeg
40
Womens Relief and Social Order
64
Influenza
89
Influenza and the Construction of Collective Identity
117
Single Parents and Orphans
141
Conclusion
165
Notes
173
Bibliography
213
Index
231
Copyright

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Over de auteur (2007)

Esyllt W. Jones is an assistant professor in the Department of History at the University of Manitoba.

Bibliografische gegevens