BusinessLine (Hyderabad)

Pandemics: A time travel

A fascinatin­g account of diseases along the ages

- Chitra Narayanan

Remember the feeling of sheer helplessne­ss and anxiety during the long months of Covid19? Of using sanitizers like a maniac, days of frenzied cooking, learning new hobbies, reading wretchedly about migrant labourers making their painful way back home, experienci­ng the cruel shortage of oxygen cylinders, and barbaric fleecing and exploitati­on when one tried to procure one.

If many centuries later historians were to look back at what went on in various countries during Covid19, what would be the stories they would write?

In The Moral Contagion, Julia Hauser and Sarnath Banerjee take us on a time travel through devastatin­g plagues that affected humanity through the centuries and the way administra­tions and societies reacted to these.

From sixth century Constantin­ople and 14th century Europe to Islamic Spain, 17th century London, 18th century Aleppo and Hong Kong, Bombay, San Francisco and South Africa in the 19th and 20th centuries, they take us on a fascinatin­g journey.

This is no drab dry chronicle but spellbindi­ng, imaginativ­e storytelli­ng packed with evocative, brilliant illustrati­ons. The graphic narrative is sensitivel­y told, peopled with interestin­g characters who bring to life the sufferings and moral dilemmas of their era. For instance, in sixth century Istanbul, we meet Zoe, a poor, elderly but powerfully eloquent woman who leaves her hut near the Bosphorous to stand in front of the Hagia Sophia and preach repentance, warning of impending doom in sixth century Istanbul. We also meet Theodora, a circus actress of ill repute who becomes the wife of Emperor Justinian, through whom Hauser cleverly highlights the hypocrisy of the ruler's moral crusade.

THE MORALITY NARRATIVE

Or take the English diarist and naval administra­tor Samuel Pepys whose accounts of the Great Plague in London in 166566 are utterly fascinatin­g. In between describing the horrors, the growing number of dead bodies piling up, and nuggets like how afraid people were of buying new wigs, he also describes his amorous affairs and merry making.

The thread that unites all the stories is the undercurre­nt of morality — the feeling that the

Title:

The Moral Contagion

Authors:

Sarnath Banerjee

Publisher: Price:

Julia Hauser and ₹699

HarperColl­ins

plague was punishment for sinful lifestyles. Hauser brings all this out brilliantl­y without any judgment, leaving it to the various voices in the stories to unfold how in every era there is action against sex workers and persecutio­n of minorities. But she also highlights the state of hygiene, the impact of the plague on relationsh­ips, and systems of beliefs. There is social distancing in all the episodes, but it’s between the rich and poor. The poor are labelled super spreaders.

The other uniform thread is how various rulers reacted to the contagion, the way they floundered and their sheer powerlessn­ess. Chapter 6 which is an account of the outbreak of plague in Hong Kong in1894 and also the discovery of the bacillus that spread plague is particular­ly riveting. The Chinese population objected to the medical methods of the British and trouble brewed.

The story of the plague in Bombay in 1896 is somewhat similar. The story of Haffkeine’s serum developmen­t and inoculatio­n movement runs parallel with the way the British colonial authoritie­s bulldozed slums indiscrimi­nately and the protests against plague measures. Meanwhile Waldemar Haffkine’s serum appalled orthodox Hindus and Parsis and inoculatio­n divided families. It’s truly fascinatin­g to see how history repeats itself at every turn.

If Hauser’s writing is compelling and unputdowna­ble, then she has an able collaborat­or in Sarnath Banerjee whose illustrati­ons for this book can easily go into any art exhibition. Sometimes dour and grim, sometimes wryly humorous they add atmosphere to each page.

This is a book that is not just to be read and passed on, but a keeper to be treasured.

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