When the City Stopped: Stories from New York's Essential Workers - Incite at Columbia University
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Work
When the City Stopped: Stories from New York's Essential Workers
- Led by Columbia Center for Oral History Research
- Published March 15, 2025
- Authors Robert W. Snyder
- Category Book
- Forum Cornell University Press
- Link www.cornellpress.cornell.edu
In When the City Stopped , Robert Snyder tells the story of COVID-19 in the words of ordinary New Yorkers, illuminating the fear and uncertainty of life in the early weeks and months, as well as the solidarity that sustained the city.
New Yorkers were "alone together," separated by the protective measures of social distancing and the fundamental inequalities of life and work in New York City. Through their personal accounts, we see that while many worked from home, others knowingly exposed themselves to the dangers of the pandemic as they drove buses, ran subways, answered 911 calls, tended to the sick, and made and delivered meals.
Snyder build bridges of knowledge and empathy between those who bore dangerous burdens and those who lived in relative safety. The story is told through the words of health care workers, grocery clerks, transit workers, and community activists who recount their experiences in poems, first-person narratives, and interviews. When the City Stopped preserves for future generations what it was like to be in New York when it was at the center of the pandemic.
To do so, he uses interviews from several archives, including Incite Institute's NYC Covid-19 Oral History, Narrative, and Memory Project.
Related Projects
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go to NYC Covid-19 Oral History, Narrative, and Memory Project
NYC Covid-19 Oral History, Narrative, and Memory ProjectDocumenting New York City’s experience of the Covid-19 pandemic. Funded by the National Science Foundation and the Board of Trustees of the American Assembly
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