‘Virology’ ponders society’s relationship with viruses

‘Virology’ ponders society’s relationship with viruses


Virology
Joseph Osmundson
W.W. Norton & Co., $16.95

As a journalist protecting COVID-19, I’ve had a front-row seat to the pandemic. I’ve been overwhelmed with despair over the demise and struggling. I’ve been numb, making an attempt to maintain up with the deluge of COVID-19 research. One balm has been the understanding of colleagues who additionally report on COVID-19.

I discovered solace too in Virology, microbiologist Joseph Osmundson’s e-book of 11 wide-ranging essays, by which he writes of the pandemic and requires “a new rhetoric of care.” Osmundson consists of journal entries from the pandemic, and a few of his experi­ences are just like mine. He goals he’s at a gathering the place nobody is masked. He too felt the “density” of the pandemic: “Emotionally dense, with loss and struggle and even some­times joy,” he writes. “Scientifically dense, with papers and pre-prints out every day that need reading and some analysis.”

Osmundson doesn’t simply deal with the COVID-19 coronavirus. He jumps from different viruses and the immune system to sickness and metaphors for sickness, to intercourse and HIV, to archiving historical past and whose tales get instructed. Parts of the e-book really feel like an anthology, with quotes from many writers who’ve weighed in on these subjects. Parts are a name to care for everybody, no matter race, ethnicity, wealth or who one loves.

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Overall, Osmundson questions how society thinks about viruses. “Viruses … are not evil, they don’t invade. They just are,” he writes. “The meaning we give a virus affects how we live with it.” When we describe viruses as enemies and sickness as a warfare, it “assumes the necessity of casualties.” He argues as a substitute to focus assets on caring for each other.

Born within the early Eighties, Osmundson, a homosexual man, is conscious about the messages that include viruses. “Our generation of gay men came after the plague,” he writes. “HIV didn’t just kill bodies. It killed a type of sex as well, a type of pleasure.” But new therapies have saved lives and altered perceptions. Pre-exposure prophylaxis can forestall an infection, whereas remedy can render HIV untransmissible (SN: 11/15/19). These advances modified our relationship with the virus, Osmundson writes. “I used to think that HIV would make it harder to find love and sex. Now we know that HIV-positive and undetectable is safe. It’s sexy.”

But the biomedicine that may change our relationship with viruses has not been wielded equitably, Osmundson observes. He returns all through the e-book to our frequent humanity. “That fact of all our bodies, vulnerable together, necessitates mutual care.”

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