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This is one of my earliest podcasts (did it during the peak of the COVID pandemic) - one of my favourites! The earlier version was not edited properly (I wasn’t good in those days!) and didn’t get the viewership it deserved. But it’s one of the most important talks of our time. Hope this clean version does the justice it deserves. Dr Nandini Bhattacharya is currently an associate professor at the University of Houston. She is a historian - her expertise is in the histories of colonial science and medicine, urban history, and modern histories of consumption, within the broader paradigm of modern South Asian history. She has taught history of medicine at Yale University, urban history at the University of Leicester, and global history at the University of Dundee prior to her appointment at the University of Houston. She is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. In this podcast, we talked about Nandindini's forthcoming book - Disparate Remedies: Making Medicines in Modern India – you can pre-order it here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Disparate-Re... Then we took our conversation around the globe with a look at the history of drugs and medicine. In the final part of the podcast, we looked at the politics of the current Coronavirus from a historical perspective and tried to find out if history can help us understand the present!