Global History and Culture Centre Blog
Global History and Culture Centre Blog
Hygienic Modernity: Reflections on the current pandemic from a historical perspective
What does ‘being modern’ mean? The current pandemic brings this perennial question once again to the fore. Is a strong centralised state that enforces strict public health measures to save lives ‘modern’? Or is a free society where people can make their own choices and control their own body ‘modern’? Is a population that firmly believes in science over all other values ‘modern’? Or is a society where there is no single fundamental assumption, but only constant scepticism and debate ‘modern’? Taking cues from Ruth Rogaski's Hygienic Modernity (2004), Bobby Tam seeks to complicate the idea of what 'modern' is based on his observations of the pandemic response in the UK, Hong Kong, and Singapore.
Anti-colonial imagination and internationalism in Basque radical nationalism (1892-1939)
In this blog post Maria Reyez Baztán presents the findings of her PhD research, provisionally titled 'anti-colonial imagination and internationalism in Basque radical nationalism (1892-1939)'. Exploring the appropriation, adaptation and uses of anti-colonial ideas in early Basque radical nationalism through the analysis of Basque newsletters and newspapers, she shows how Basque radicals’ changing conceptions of colonialism correlate to global shifts occurring during this period. Her case study illuminates how ethnonationalist movements drew inspiration from ideas and events unfolding in different parts of the world, with anti-colonial movements providing a particularly constructive model for Western nationalists, who saw in these struggles a resemblance to their own history of oppression. These shared feelings acted as a source of connection which transcended national boundaries, embedding Basque nationalism within global intellectual history.
Forgotten Children: Black Lives and the Eighteenth-Century Foundling Hospital
The records of the eighteenth-century Foundling Hospital in London reveal an untold part of its history – that of the presence and experiences of Black, brown and mixed-race infants cared for by the charity. In this blog post, Hannah Dennett shares the first findings of her collaborative PhD project based at Warwick and the Foundling Museum. Her research to date has already revealed more incidences of children of colour being admitted into the Foundling Hospital in the eighteenth century than anticipated it would be possible to discover. As she demonstrates through the case of Mary Carne and her infant son born in 1798, the lives of these foundlings, no longer forgotten, are important for shaping a more complete history of the Foundling Hospital.
Music, Culture, and Empire in Eighteenth-Century Britain
Every Tuesday evening in August, Oxford-based orchestra Instruments of Time & Truth in collaboration with Warwick's Global History and Culture Centre and Early Modern and Eighteenth-Century Centre presents a digital series of performances and talks exploring the lives of musicians and their patrons in eighteenth-century London. The series will premiere on Youtube on 4 August at 7pm. This blog post features an historical essay accompanying the concert series by Professor Maxine Berg, detailing the rich musical culture of eighteenth-century London and Britain more generally and its historic links to empire, slavery, and changing global patterns of consumption.
The Pandemic, Privilege and Global History
Some six weeks after sending out a questionnaire to the wider GHCC community to survey their localised responses to the global pandemic (read more here), GHCC director Anne Gerritsen returns to the responses she received and surveys them in the light of the subsequent global responses to the murder of George Floyd and the Black Lives Matter movement. Connecting the pandemic, privilege, and global history, this post closes our GHCC pandemic mini-series.
Who wears a mask? The global pandemic and a brief history of masks in Republican China
Amidst the current Covid-19 pandemic, the issue of wearing masks has become a topic of international public concern. During the early stages of this global pandemic, wearing masks was mostly associated with certain regional identities in Asia. Yet, as Zhu Jing shows in this latest contribution to the GHCC pandemic mini-series, wearing masks as a public health precaution has a very long and global history. Perhaps surprisingly, the introduction of masks in Republican China in the first half of the twentieth century was a direct outflow of interactions with, and influences from, the West.
Lockdown Reading: Trevor Burnard on Big Books, Globalisation and Pandemics in History
For those of us fortunate enough to be healthy, secure, and without caring responsibilities, the pandemic has offered an opportunity to pause and reflect on globalisation and the ways we write about it. In this guest blog, Professor Trevor Burnard, formerly Warwick History's head of department and currently Director of the Wilberforce Institute for the Study of Slavery and Emancipation, talks us through his lockdown reading. In the wake of Covid historians will need to revise their accounts of globalisation, he suggests, although not quite as dramatically as political economists: "at least we sometimes get the past right while others speculate badly on the future."
Amy and the Pandemic: Past and Present
If anyone was under the impression that the widespread practice of wearing facemasks originated with the 2002-3 SARS outbreak in China, they would be mistaken. People in Asia have worn masks for much longer. Amy Evans, secretary of the Global History and Culture Centre for over ten years, remembers wearing face masks when she was growing up in Shanghai (and hating it with a passion). In this fourth instalment of the GHCC pandemic mini-series, Amy talks to GHCC director Anne Gerritsen about her upbringing in China, her move to the UK in the wake of the hand-over of Hong Kong, and her experience of pandemics both in Shanghai and the West Midlands.