2020 One city, seven people, and the year everything changed

Eric Klinenberg

Book - 2024

"Crisis has a way of laying bare our truest selves: who we trust, which principles and impulses we heed, whose lives we deem expendable. As it ravaged millions of lives, the Covid-19 pandemic revealed and accentuated the dividing lines that had already, for decades, splintered American public life. Against the backdrop of the 2020 presidential election, misinformation regimes, and the transformation of the facemask into a flagrant political symbol, acclaimed sociologist Eric Klinenberg takes careful inventory of how the U.S. and other nations handled the extraordinary challenges of that seminal year. Any autopsy searches for causes, and in this book, Klinenberg uses seven people's piercingly vivid reflections to examine how commun...ities across the globe reckoned with the profound tragedy and loss of 2020--and how they built networks of solidarity in an attempt to survive. We move from the gross negligence in Canadian for-profit nursing homes, to England's gradualist approach to instating robust Covid safety protocols, to early policy innovations in Australia, South Korea, and Taiwan, which dramatically curtailed the virus' spread. According to Klinenberg, our capacity to bear witness to the rampant failures and successful models of resilience of 2020 will help shape our responses to the escalating climate emergency, the ongoing fight for racial justice, and widening global economic disparities. This book is both mirror and roadmap--a reflection of the social divisions that plague our world and a set of principles for how we might approach the next global catastrophe differently"--

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Subjects
Genres
History
Personal narratives
Anecdotes
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Eric Klinenberg (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"This is a Borzoi book"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
444 pages : illustrations, map ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780593319482
  • Prologue Breathe
  • Chapter 1. "It Was a Battle" (May Lee)
  • Chapter 2. Initial Response
  • Chapter 3. "Twenty-Four Hours a Day" (Sophia Zayas)
  • Chapter 4. Trust
  • Chapter 5. "Nothing Left to Lose" (Daniel Presti)
  • Chapter 6. The Meaning of Masks
  • Chapter 7. "Something's Missing in My Soul" (Enuma Menkiti)
  • Chapter 8. The Problem of Distancing
  • Chapter 9. "The Bridge" (Nuala O'Doherty)
  • Chapter 10. Neighborhoods
  • Chapter 11. "COVID Was Not My Primary Concern" (Brandon English)
  • Chapter 12. Race
  • Chapter 13. "Travels Far" (Thankachan Mathai)
  • Chapter 14. Home Alone
  • Chapter 15. Growing Up
  • Chapter 16. American Anomie
  • Epilogue
  • Appendix: A Note on the Research
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Not everyone has been infected with COVID-19, but all of us have been indelibly affected by it. Year One of the pandemic in 2020 wrought fear, isolation, loss, and uncertainty. America largely fractured. Even when safe and effective vaccines for COVID-19 became available, a sizable number of Americans were unwilling to be vaccinated. Sociologist Klinenberg (Palaces for the People, 2018) figuratively employs magnifying glass, binoculars, and telescope in examining the effects of, and reactions to, the pandemic on ordinary people (through detailed interviews), neighborhood communities (the boroughs of New York City), and nations (UK, China, Taiwan, Australia, the U.S.). He compiles a superb "social autopsy" of turbulent 2020, investigating how institutions, societies, and political leadership cracked. He also notes the significance of Black Lives Matter protests and that year's contentious election. The results of this postmortem exam are insightful and infuriating. Klinenberg highlights the magnitude of racial inequities and socioeconomic disparities, the disintegration of trust, and the plague of misinformation. Masks, social distancing, and the surge of destructive behavior in the U.S. receive attention. This exceptional discussion of the chaos and catastrophe of COVID-19 ranks alongside Lawrence Wright's The Plague Year (2021) as essential reading on the subject. Let's hope that the experience of 2020 has bestowed upon us 20/20 lucidity, resolve, and solidarity moving forward.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

New York University sociologist Klinenberg (Palaces for the People) revisits in this complex and at times riveting work the tumultuous and traumatic first year of the Covid-19 pandemic in New York City. Presenting powerful personal narratives drawn from in-depth interviews alongside surveys and other studies, Klinenberg captures the year's political upheaval by showcasing a wide variety of individual perspectives, ranging from those who protested George Floyd's murder to those radicalized by the loss of individual liberties in the name of public health. Poignant stories of people caught up in the chaos and uncertainty are the book's greatest strength. Thankachan Mathai, a trained physicist from India who had found work as a janitor with the city's Metropolitan Transit Authority, felt duty-bound to continue working in the very early days of the pandemic and succumbed to the disease in March of 2020. Daniel Presti, another profile subject, was launching a new bar when Covid first emerged; feeling increasingly abandoned by city government, he began to operate the bar in defiance of local health measures. In the volume's latter half, Klinenberg leans more heavily into studies and surveys, somewhat to the detriment of the narrative. Still, readers ready to reflect on 2020 will want to check out this vivid and nuanced account. (Feb.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Klinenberg's (social sciences, NYU; Palaces for the People) rigorously researched book captures the COVID pandemic's profound impacts--political, economic, social, and emotional--on people around the world. From the earliest hints of COVID in China in 2019, to Trump's responses to the growing evidence of its rapid spread in the U.S., there have been significant effects on the everyday lives of people who were just trying to do their jobs and take care of their families and friends. The pandemic heightened societal awareness of the terrible disparities in health care and social services, and it reflected the often-dangerous power of social media. Klinenberg also discusses George Floyd's murder and the Black Lives Matter movement in 2020, a compelling part of the book. He pays tribute to people's resilience and generous responses in the face of terrible odds, via profiles of seven individuals. VERDICT Scholarly but engrossing, this book captures the lingering uncertainty that has characterized the COVID pandemic, while assessing its global effects and likely future challenges. This vital title has breadth.--Ellen Gilbert

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An intimate look at the advent of Covid-19 in the United States. Sociologist Klinenberg, director of the Institute for Public Knowledge at NYU, examines the impact of the pandemic on America through the experiences of seven New Yorkers of different ages, races, ethnicities, economic statuses, and political ideologies, setting the details of their lives within a larger geographical, political, and social context. He discusses, for example, how other countries dealt with the pandemic, and how trust--in government and science--became a crucial issue in shaping people's behavior. Just as masks are "made of social fabric," attitudes about social distancing, shutdowns, and vaccinations reflected the multiple realities of a "polarized, segregated, and unequal" nation. Klinenberg's subjects include an elementary school principal living in a multigenerational family residence in Chinatown; a Puerto Rican woman in the Bronx working as a political appointee in the Andrew Cuomo administration; a bar owner in Staten Island, frustrated by the impact of long closures on his fledgling business; a feisty retired district attorney, a first-generation Irish American, living with her Ecuadoran husband and children in an ethnically diverse, densely populated Queens neighborhood; a mixed-race couple with two young daughters in Brooklyn; a photographer active in the Black Lives Matter movement; and a man whose father had worked as a custodian for the Metropolitan Transit Authority, which forbade wearing masks as a violation of its dress code (like many other essential workers, he contracted Covid and died). Besides these central characters, Klinenberg brings in many others who speak to their own experiences, ranging from depression to food insecurity. Many who lived alone suffered feelings of isolation, neglect, and marginalization. Although the author found some hopeful evidence of solidarity, the pandemic unfortunately incited fear and resentment, making the U.S., unlike other countries, "exceptionally explosive" as a result. A vivid, multifaceted portrait of a wounded nation. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.