Representing the Plague in Early Modern England

Representing the Plague in Early Modern England
Author: Rebecca Totaro
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 546
Release: 2010-09-13
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1136963235


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This collection offers readers a timely encounter with the historical experience of people adapting to a pandemic emergency and the corresponding narrative representation of that crisis, as early modern writers transformed the plague into literature. The essays examine the impact of the plague on health, politics, and religion as well as on the plays, prose fiction, and plague bills that stand as witnesses to the experience of a society devastated by contagious disease. Readers will find physicians and moralists wrestling with the mysteries of the disease; erotic escapades staged in plague-time plays; the poignant prose works of William Bullein and Thomas Dekker; the bodies of monarchs who sought to protect themselves from plague; the chameleon-like nature of the plague as literal disease and as metaphor; and future strains of plague, literary and otherwise, which we may face in the globally-minded, technology-dependent, and ecologically-awakened twenty-first century. The bubonic plague compelled change in all aspects of lived experience in Early Modern England, but at the same time, it opened space for writers to explore new ideas and new literary forms—not all of them somber or horrifying and some of them downright hilarious. By representing the plague for their audiences, these writers made an epidemic calamity intelligible: for them, the dreaded disease could signify despair but also hope, bewilderment but also a divine plan, quarantine but also liberty, death but also new life.


Representing the Plague in Early Modern England
Language: en
Pages: 546
Authors: Rebecca Totaro
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2010-09-13 - Publisher: Routledge

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This collection offers readers a timely encounter with the historical experience of people adapting to a pandemic emergency and the corresponding narrative repr
Plague Writing in Early Modern England
Language: en
Pages: 309
Authors: Ernest B. Gilman
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2009-08-01 - Publisher: University of Chicago Press

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During the seventeenth century, England was beset by three epidemics of the bubonic plague, each outbreak claiming between a quarter and a third of the populati
Fictions of Disease in Early Modern England
Language: en
Pages: 289
Authors: M. Healy
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2001-11-07 - Publisher: Springer

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How did early modern people imagine their bodies? What impact did the new disease syphilis and recurrent outbreaks of plague have on these mental landscapes? Wh
The Literary Culture of Plague in Early Modern England
Language: en
Pages: 244
Authors: Kathleen Miller
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2017-07-06 - Publisher: Springer

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This book is about the literary culture that emerged during and in the aftermath of the Great Plague of London (1665). Textual transmission impacted upon and si
Plague Image and Imagination from Medieval to Modern Times
Language: en
Pages: 309
Authors: Christos Lynteris
Categories: Science
Type: BOOK - Published: 2021-07-29 - Publisher: Springer Nature

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This edited collection brings together new research by world-leading historians and anthropologists to examine the interaction between images of plague in diffe