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Culture & Captivity - Mary talks lockdown and plague diaries

Mary talks lockdown and plague diaries

07/10/24 • 29 min

Culture & Captivity

In this episode, Wemmy Ogunyankin and Mary Rehman discuss Mary’s work on seventeenth-century plague journals, and diaries written during COVID-19 Lockdowns in the UK.


Listen as Mary expands the concept of ‘captivity’ beyond the prison narrative to include collective concepts of incarceration in the context of past and present pandemics, by answering questions on the following topics:

  • How Mary approached this research, and her methodological process with regards to selecting both early modern and twenty-first-century diaries.
  • Her current findings, including some surprising similarities between plague and COVID-19 experience, such as a vested interest in death tolls and official statistics, the appearance of cultures of blame, and the desire to reclaim joy.
  • The challenge of ensuring fair representation when it comes to working with personal writings.
  • How Mary navigated her personal feelings as she read the diaries, and how the content of Lockdown journals resonated with her own COVID-19 experience.
  • The importance of memorialising pandemic experience for future generations.

Find the show notes at https://medium.com/@cultcaptpod


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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In this episode, Wemmy Ogunyankin and Mary Rehman discuss Mary’s work on seventeenth-century plague journals, and diaries written during COVID-19 Lockdowns in the UK.


Listen as Mary expands the concept of ‘captivity’ beyond the prison narrative to include collective concepts of incarceration in the context of past and present pandemics, by answering questions on the following topics:

  • How Mary approached this research, and her methodological process with regards to selecting both early modern and twenty-first-century diaries.
  • Her current findings, including some surprising similarities between plague and COVID-19 experience, such as a vested interest in death tolls and official statistics, the appearance of cultures of blame, and the desire to reclaim joy.
  • The challenge of ensuring fair representation when it comes to working with personal writings.
  • How Mary navigated her personal feelings as she read the diaries, and how the content of Lockdown journals resonated with her own COVID-19 experience.
  • The importance of memorialising pandemic experience for future generations.

Find the show notes at https://medium.com/@cultcaptpod


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Previous Episode

undefined - Emily talks the overpoliticisation of prisons

Emily talks the overpoliticisation of prisons

In this episode, Mary Rehman talks to Emily Sisson about her research into the overpoliticisation of prison policy since 2010. Listen as Emily discusses the problems with this and outlines why a prison commission might be solution to depoliticising prisons.


She answers questions around the following topics:

  • How Emily became interested in this topic for her research and the key research gap in her area.
  • Her methodological process and some problems she has been encountering in terms of access to prisons.
  • Some of her preliminary findings
  • Her thoughts on how her work might impact wider conversations around the penal experience and the importance of depoliticising prisons.

Find the show notes at https://medium.com/@cultcaptpod


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Next Episode

undefined - Wemmy talks Hurricane Katrina photographs

Wemmy talks Hurricane Katrina photographs

In this episode, Belinda Sherlock and Wemmy Ogunyankin discuss Wemmy’s research into photographs of recently arrested and incarcerated people taken in the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in the U.S. and related questions of social, racial and photographic justice.


They discuss:

  • Creativity as a form of liberation in captive spaces
  • The significant gap in research into photographs of recently arrested/incarcerated Katrina flood victims, and the implications of those photographs
  • The emotional impact of researching images that depict violence towards or negligence of these flood victims, particularly young black men in New Orleans
  • The ethical challenges and power dynamics within working with images taken without consent, and where consent cannot be retrospectively sought
  • A specific photograph taken by photojournalist Kampha Bouaphanh of “looters” being arrested, explored in depth (see details/link below)
  • Wemmy’s hope that this research will encourage people to take more time and care looking at images, and to work towards greater epistemic and photographic justice.

Find the show notes at https://medium.com/@cultcaptpod


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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