Jonathan Kennedy teaches global public health at Queen Mary University of London. He has a PhD in sociology from the University of Cambridge. His interdisciplinary research has been published in leading medical, public health, sociology and history journals, and he has written for newspapers including the Guardian and El Pais. Pathogenesis is his first book.
This sweeping history is Kennedy's debut, and a powerfully argued
one... Pathogenesis sets out, like Yuval Noah Harari's Sapiens or
Peter Frankopan's recent The Earth Transformed, to reinterpret the
entire history of mankind... A fascinating and pacey run through
the history of humanity from an unfamiliar perspective.
*Sunday Times*
This book challenges some of the greatest cliches about colonialism
and leaves you wondering why you ever gave them the time of day. A
revelation, and also that rarest thing, a science title that is
entirely comprehensible and often a pleasure to read.
*Sathnam Sanghera, bestselling author of Empireland*
Pathogenesis is superbly written. Kennedy seamlessly weaves
together scientific and historical research, and his confident
authorial voice is sure to please readers of Yuval Noah Harari or
Rutger Bregman.
*The Times*
Thrilling and eye-opening. From neolithic diseases to Covid-19,
Jonathan Kennedy explores the enormous role played by some of the
tiniest life on Earth: the power of plagues in shaping world
history.
*Professor Lewis Dartnell, bestselling author of Origins and
Being Human*
From the fall of Rome to the Spanish conquest of the Americas to
the industrial revolution, germs have played as much a role in
history as guns, generals and "great men"... Jonathan Kennedy
restores the microbes of infectious disease to their rightful place
in the story of human evolution and the rise and fall of
civilisations. Science and history at its best.
*Dr Mark Honigsbaum, author of The Pandemic Century*
Kennedy's book, which aims to show how infectious disease has
shaped us from the time of the Neanderthals to the era of Covid-19,
is full of amazing facts... Pathogenesis doesn't only cover
thousands of years of history - it seeks radically to alter the way
the reader views many of the (often very well-known) events it
describes.
*Observer*
Professor Kennedy-drawing on the latest research in fields ranging
from genetics and anthropology to archaeology and
economics-explores eight major outbreaks of infectious disease
across the entire history of civilization... It's not often you
pick up a book that promises to alter your entire understanding of
the story of humanity.
*LitHub*
An absorbing book... Kennedy's intertwined story of humanity and
humongous disease is told lucidly and knowledgeably, with ample
historical context.
*Telegraph*
How a virus might have written human history. This is a
fascinating, readable, and superbly researched account of how
infectious diseases have shaped our history, from the Palaeolithic
Era to Covid.
*Professor David Christian, bestselling author of Origin
Story and Future Stories*
Our very existence and success as a species, Kennedy argues in this
fascinating book, has been shaped by bacteria and viruses.
*Guardian*
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