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  • The Study: How Socially Concious Makers Are Giving Back to Local Communities

    The 1stDibs The Study, I interviewed makers who are embedding socially consciousness in their practices, from heritage sheep wool blankets to mud bead chandeliers: Each step in crafting an object has an environmental and social impact, from the sourcing of materials to production. Aware of the responsibility this entails, many designers and makers are thoughtfully…

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  • Hart Island in National Geographic

    I covered the role of Hart Island in caring for the unclaimed dead and its new significance amidst COVID-19, for National Geographic: The burial process hasn’t changed much since the late 1800s. An 1890 photo by Jacob Riis shows coffins being lowered into a trench, and an aerial video today shows a similar scene. It’s…

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  • And Now Presents Podcast

    The And Now Presents podcast included me in their episode on “Pandemic Art.” It was interesting to revisit the “Spanish flu and the depiction of disease” article I wrote way back in October 2019 for Wellcome Collection, as I never would have imagined it would be so relevant to contemporary life. Listen here.

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  • JSTOR Daily: Surviving a Pandemic, in 1918

    I explored the first-hand accounts of the nuns who volunteered as nurses during the 1918 influenza pandemic in Philadelphia for JSTOR Daily: For all the devastation of pandemics, there is a historic forgetfulness around them. They are not events that get grand public memorials, and their tolls tend to be remembered individually, rather than collectively,…

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  • Lapham’s Quarterly: Remember You Will Be Buried

    Lapham’s Quarterly published my essay “Remember You Will Be Buried” on the changes in remembrance in cemeteries from the Victorian to Gilded Age: Tombstones have always been tools of memory. “If a man do not erect in this age his own tomb ere he dies, he shall live no longer in monument than the bell…

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