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IMAGINING CONTAGION IN EARLY MODERN EUROPE; ED. BY CLAIRE L. CARLINIMAGINING CONTAGION IN EARLY MODERN EUROPE; ED. BY CLAIRE L. CARLIN

IMAGINING CONTAGION IN EARLY MODERN EUROPE; ED. BY CLAIRE L. CARLIN

Claire L. Carlin

About this book

"In this volume, specialists in social and cultural history, early modern literature, philosophy and art history come together to explore the intersection between the material and the metaphorical at a time when emerging scientific discovery coexisted with traditional beliefs. An examination of the evolving knowledge, fears and desires of the fifteenth to eighteenth centuries can help us reflect on the 21st-century preoccupation with contagious diseases such as avian influenza, SARS, West Nile virus, Norwalk virus and the new strain of AIDS. The idea of contagion generates powerful metaphors that colour religious, political and artistic discourse. But during the early modern era, words and images take on literal force: in church or in the home reading novels, in the political arena or while travelling, disease shows up in and on bodies under the influence of language."--Jacket.

Details

OL Work ID
OL16956096W

Subjects

Communicable diseasesHistoryEpidemicsPsychologyAttitude to HealthDisease TransmissionInfectious Disease Transmission

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.