Plagues that Changed History | WEA Sydney

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The Plague of Justinian (541-549 AD) killed a quarter of the population of the Byzantine Empire and precipitated its fall. The Black Death (1346-1353) killed 50% of the people of Europe and led to the collapse of the feudal system. The Spanish Flu (1918-1920) caused the death of up to 100 million people, and following the carnage of WWI remade modern society. The HIV/AIDS pandemic (1980-to date) has cost over 40 million lives and reshaped social and political norms. COVID19 is the latest society-changing pandemic which lingers with us today. How did all this happen?

DELIVERY MODE

  • Face-to-Face

SUGGESTED READING

  • William Rosen: Justinian’s Flea (Viking, 2007, 978-0670038558)
  • Norman Cantor: In the Wake of the Plague (Simon & Schuster, 2001, 0-7434-3035-2)
  • Laura Spinney: Pale Rider (Public Affairs, 2017, 987-1-61039-767-4)
  • Peter Curson & Kevin McCracken: Plague in Sydney (NSW UP, nd, 0-86840-219-2)
  • Alan Whiteside: HIV/AIDS – a Very Short Introduction (OUP, 2016, 978-0198727491)

COURSE OUTLINE

  • Pandemic plagues have the capacity to upend all social and political order, destroying old regimes and creating new ones.
  • Plagues in the ancient world were uncontrollable and their management impossible, but modern pandemics require political as well as medical leadership.
  • Some nations manage pandemics better than others – why? The answer is not medical but political.

LEARNING OUTCOMES

By the end of this course, students should be able to:

  1. Understanding that uncontrollable factors can change the course of history.
  2. Appreciate that in pandemics political leadership is as important as medical intervention.

Interested in this course? JOIN OUR WAITLIST to be notified when vacancies or future classes are available.