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El. knyga: Plague Image and Imagination from Medieval to Modern Times

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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 different temporal and spatial contexts, and the imagination of the disease from the Middle Ages to today. The chapters in this book illuminate to what extent the image of plague has not simply reflected, but also impacted the way in which the disease is experienced in different historical periods. The book asks what is the contribution of the entanglement between epidemic image and imagination to the persistence of plague as a category of human suffering across so many centuries, in spite of profound shifts in our medical understanding of the disease. What is it that makes plague such a visually charismatic subject? And why is the medical, religious and lay imagination of plague so consistently determined by the visual register? In answering these questions, this volume takes the study of plague images beyond its usual, art-historical framework, so as to examine them and their relation to the imagination of plague from medical, historical, visual anthropological, and postcolonial perspectives.

1 Introduction: Imaging and Imagining Plague
1(10)
Chrisros Lynteris
2 Why Is Black Death Black? European Gothic Imaginaries of `Oriental' Plague
11(26)
Niikhet Varhk
3 Painting the Plague, 1250--1630
37(32)
Sheila Barker
4 Pesthouse Imaginaries
69(42)
Ann G. Carmichael
5 Picturing Plague: Photography, Pestilence and Cremation in Late Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century India
111(30)
David Arnold
6 Reflexive Gaze and Constructed Meanings: Photographs of Plague Hospitals in Colonial Bombay
141(50)
Abhijit Sarkar
7 Plague in India: Contagion, Quarantine, and the Transmission of Scientific Knowledge
191(14)
Samuel Cohn Jr.
8 Bamboo Dwellers: Plague, Photography, and the House in Colonial Java
205(30)
Maurits Bastiaan Meerwijk
9 Making a Model Plague: Paper Technologies and Epidemiological Casuistry in the Early Twentieth Century
235(32)
Lukas Engelmann
10 Ethnographic Images of the Plague: Outbreak and the Landscape of Memory in Madagascar Rasolonomenjanahary
267(22)
Genese Marie Sodikoff
Z. R. Dieudonne
Index 289
Christos Lynteris is a social anthropologist working on the anthropological and historical examination of epidemics, zoonosis, and epidemiological epistemology. He is Professor of Medical Anthropology at the University of St Andrews, UK, currently leading a Wellcome-funded project on The Global War Against the Rat and the Epistemic Emergence of Zoonosis. He was Principal Investigator of the ERC funded research project Visual Representations of the Third Plague Pandemic (University of Cambridge, 2013-17, University of St Andrews 2017-2018).