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Melanie A. Kiechle

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  • Yellow oily paper with writing

    Smell, History, and Heritage

    Smell’s diffuse nature requires crossing the boundaries of several subfields within the historical discipline, but also moving beyond the boundaries of history alone.
    by Cecilia Bembibre, William Tullett, Stephanie Weismann, Melanie A. Kiechle, Inger Leemans, Anna Chen, Hsuan L. Hsu, Xuelei Huang, Duane Jethro, Jorge Otero-Pailos via American Historical Review on April 26, 2022
  • Pedestrians wearing protective masks walk past diners eating outdoors in Brooklyn's Park Slope neighborhood last month.
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    Revisiting a 19th Century Medical Idea Could Help Address Covid-19

    When germ theory displaced the idea of "miasmas" we lost important knowledge about tackling airborne disease.
    by Melanie A. Kiechle via Made By History on April 21, 2021
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    Public Health Isn’t The Enemy of Economic Well-Being

    As 19th century reformers showed, only a healthy workforce can fuel economic prosperity.
    by Melanie A. Kiechle via Made By History on April 24, 2020
  • In 19th-Century America, Fighting Disease Meant Battling Bad Smells

    The history of unpleasant odor, or miasma, has unexpected relevance in the time of COVID-19.
    by Melanie A. Kiechle, Daniela Blei via Atlas Obscura on April 8, 2020

Related Excerpts

Viewing 1–1 of 1

If You Smell Something, Say Something

City dwellers of the 19th century were dogged by a foul terror: miasma.
by Conevery Bolton Valencius via Distillations on July 31, 2018
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