
In Contagion's Wake : Black Writers and the Development of Modern Outbreak Narratives
by University of Massachusetts Press
£26.99
MPN9781625349347
Prices updated 21 May 2026
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An examination of early American literature that highlights how racial divides exacerbated—and were exacerbated by—the spread of infection In April of 1721, the HMS Seahorse arrived in Boston from the West Indies, causing a smallpox epidemic that would plague the city for the next year.Of its 12,000 inhabitants, nearly fifty percent were infected, and 900 people died.Like the coronavirus pandemic that began in 2020, the outbreak also brought to the surface deep divides in the social fabric of colonial New England and laid the groundwork for racialized political inequities that we continue to grapple with today. In Contagion’s Wake examines a range of American outbreak narratives, both historical and fictional, written between the early 1700s and the early 1900s—from the rise of inoculation through the advent of germ theory.Author Kelly L. Bezio argues that during this period, literature about communicable disease was dominated by white authors, such as Cotton Mather and Edgar Allen Poe, who tended to privilege white suffering and survival while obscuring Black suffering and vulnerability.Black authors, however, such as Olaudah Equiano and Frances E.W.Harper, developed variations on plot structures, metaphors, and imagery that drew upon contagion to represent racial injustice and further the cause of Black liberation. The diverse texts Bezio analyzes vary extensively in genre and geographical location, and in the illnesses that feature in their pages.Significant disorders from the era, including yellow fever, smallpox, consumption, and cholera, make frequent appearances, as do less culturally dominant diseases such as St.Anthony’s Fire. In Contagion’s Wake contends that representations of communicable disease should not be understood only as within their own historical moment; rather, they function more like a DNA code for our present time.
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