Investigating the impact of the Spanish Flu and its relevance in the contemporary world through the PJAEE, 17 (6) (2020) individual and collective memories of the people lived through it. INVESTIGATING THE IMPACT OF THE SPANISH FLU AND ITS RELEVANCE IN THE CONTEMPORARY WORLD THROUGH THE INDIVIDUAL AND COLLECTIVE MEMORIES OF THE PEOPLE LIVED THROUGH IT. Niranjana, PhD Scholar, Vellore Institute of Technology, Chennai
[email protected] Dr. G. Bhuvaneswari, Assistant Professor Senior, Vellore Institute of Technology,Chennai
[email protected] 9943435572 Niranjana, Dr. G. Bhuvaneswari, Investigating the impact of the Spanish Flu and its relevance in the contemporary world through the individual and collective memories of the people lived through it.-Palarch’s Journal Of Archaeology Of Egypt/Egyptology 17(6), ISSN 1567-214x Abstract: “Memory studies is an interdisciplinary field, and Literature serves as one of the media of cultural memory as history, art and other forms of media”, said by Astrid Erll. According to Maurice Halbwachs, there exists no individual memory but a collective memory. Our memory is the product of the personal individual experiences informed by the societal practices. This study examines the convergence of the individual and collective memory of the common people, medical historians and scientistswho lived through the Spanish Flupandemic to understand the impact of it through the book, “Pale Rider: The Spanish Flu of 1918 and How it Changed the World” by Laura Spinney, a non-fictional account of the Spanish Flu pandemic tracing from its origin to the post-flu world. The biographies, stories and letters act as the sites of memory to understand the impact of the Pandemic and its contemporary relevance.