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Viral modernism : the influenza pandemic and interwar literature /

"The influenza pandemic of 1918-1919 took the lives of between 50 and 100 million people worldwide, and the United States suffered more casualties than in all the wars of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries combined. Yet despite these catastrophic death tolls, the pandemic faded from histo...

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Détails bibliographiques
Cote:Libro Electrónico
Auteur principal: Outka, Elizabeth (Auteur)
Format: Électronique eBook
Langue:Inglés
Publié: New York : Columbia University Press, [2020]
Collection:Modernist latitudes.
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:Texto completo
Table des matières:
  • Acknowledgments
  • Chapter One. Introducing the pandemic
  • PART I. PANDEMIC REALISM: MAKING AN ATMOSPHERE VISIBLE. Chapter Two. Untangling war and plague: Willa Cather and Katherine Anne Porter
  • Chapter Three. Domestic pandemic: Thomas Wolfe and William Maxwell
  • PART II. PANDEMIC MODERNISM. Chapter Four. On seeing illness: Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway
  • Chapter Five. A wasteland of influenza: T.S. Eliot's The Waste land
  • Chapter Six. Apocalyptic pandemic: W.B. Yeats's "The Second coming"
  • PART III. PANDEMIC CULTURES. Chapter Seven. Spiritualism, zombies, and the return of the dead
  • Coda: The structure of illness, the shape of loss
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index.