|
original article |
Date |
Title |
Authors Max. 6 Authors |
1 |
[GO] |
2023―Oct―26 |
Filling China’s Gaps. Viral Banks and Bird Collections as Museums for Pandemics |
Frédéric Keck |
2 |
[GO] |
2023―Apr―19 |
Pandemic Histories: Making Meaning or Embedding Bromides? |
Anne-Emanuelle Birn |
3 |
[GO] |
2022―Jun―01 |
End of a Pandemic? Contemporary Explanations for the End of Plague in 18th-Century England |
Paul Slack |
4 |
[GO] |
2020―Jul―28 |
Asian tigers and the Chinese dragon: Competition and collaboration between sentinels of pandemics from SARS to COVID-19 |
Frédéric Keck |
5 |
[GO] |
2020―Jul―28 |
COVID-19, history, and humility |
David S. Jones |
6 |
[GO] |
2020―Jul―28 |
Layers of epidemy: Present pasts during the first weeks of COVID-19 in western Kenya |
P. Wenzel Geissler, Ruth J. Prince |
7 |
[GO] |
2020―Jul―28 |
It wasn't supposed to be a coronavirus: The quest for an influenza A(
H5N1
)-derived vaccine and the limits of pandemic preparedness |
Brian Dolan |
8 |
[GO] |
2020―Jul―28 |
How to have narrative-flipping history in a pandemic: Views of/from Latin America |
Anne-Emanuelle Birn |
9 |
[GO] |
2020―May―04 |
Quarantine, Cholera, and International Health Spaces: Reflections on Nineteenth-century European Sanitary Regulations in the Time of the SARS-CoV-2 |
Benoît Pouget |