HISTORICAL ROLE MODELS WHO WERE PRODUCTIVE DURING QUARANTINE

HISTORICAL ROLE MODELS WHO WERE PRODUCTIVE DURING QUARANTINE

Life has changed rapidly since WHO declared COVID-19 a  pendemic on  March 11, 2020. As the us novel coronavirus that causes the disease has spread across the world offices have closed, public spaces have emptied, and officials have urged people to stay home as much as possible. Many of us have suddenly found with more free time and limited ways to spend it. Isolation or quarantine  is a great time to prioritize your mental and physical well-being, but if you also want to use it to be productive, you have plenty of historical role models to choose from.

1. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

“William Shakespeare wrote King Lear in quarantine” is exactly the type of exaggerated story you’d expect to see spread during a wild news cycle, but this is one viral titbit that’s rooted in truth. Shakespear was an actor and shareholder with The King’s Men theatre troupe when the bubonic plague forced London theatres to close in the early 17th century. The official rule was that after weeks, when the death toll  exceeded 30, public playhouses had to shut down. This meant that the theatre industry was paralyzed for much of 1606 when the plague returned to the city. After suddenly finding himself without a steady job and lots of free time,  Shakespear got to writing. He composed  kingLear ,Macbeth, and Antony and Cleopatra before the year was over.

2. ISAAC NEWTON

A few decades after an isolated Shakespeare wrote some of his most famous plays, Isaac Newton found himself having to avoid disease in England. In 1665, when Newton was in his early 20s, one of the last major outbreaks of the bubonic plague hit the country. Classes at Cambridge University were cancelled, so Newton retreated to his family estate roughly 60 miles away to continue his studies there. He didn’t have to worry about responding to professors' emails or video conferencing into classes, and with zero structure, he excelled. The young mathematician produced some of his best work during his year in quarantine, writing the papers that would become early calculus and developing his theories on optics while playing with prisms in his bedroom. This was also the time when his   theory of gravity germinated. While an apple likely didn’t hit Newton on the head, there was an apple tree outside his window that may have inspired his revelation.

3. EDVARD MUNCH

The Scream painter  Edward Munch didn’t just witness the Spanish Flu pandemic change the world around him he  contracted the disease around the beginning of 1919, while living in Norway. But instead of becoming one of its many victims, Munch lived to continue making great art. As soon as he felt physically capable, he gathered his painting supplies and began capturing his physical state. Self-Portrait with the Spanish Flu shows him with   thinnining hair and a gaunt face sitting in front of his sickbed.

4. THOMAS NASHE

Thomas Nashe was an Elizabethan playwright who gained fame around the same time as William Shakespeare. When the bubonic plague hit London in 1592, Nashe fled to the English countryside to avoid infection. This was the same time he wrote Summers' Last Will and Testament, a play that reflects his experiences living through the pandemic.

5. GIOVANNI BOCCACCIO

Florentine writer and poet Giovanni Boccaccio was personally affected by the bubonic plague. When it hit Florence in 1348, both his father and stepmother succumbed to the disease. Boccaccio survived the outbreak by fleeing the city and hiding out in the Tuscan countryside. During this period, he wrote The Decameron  a collection of novellas framed as stories a group of friends tell each other while quarantined inside a villa during the plague.