Kelly L. Bezio is professor of English at Texas A&M University - Corpus Christi. Her work has appeared in American Literature, Literature & Medicine, The Eighteenth Century: Theory and Interpretation, English Language Notes, Pedagogy, Interdisciplinary Journal of Leadership Studies, and more.
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Description
Preface Acknowledgments Introduction: 1721 and Its Afterlives - Racialization in Modern Communicable Disease Discourse 1. Early America and Modern Outbreak Narratives 2. Communicable Disease and Narrating a Right to Life 3. Outbreak, Victimhood Narratives, and Barriers to Imagining Racial Equality 4. Black Adaptations of Outbreak Narratives Coda: Considering Epidemiology's Need for Literary History Notes Index
"Bezio makes a meaningful contribution with this well-researched and up-to-date book by filling a gap in both literary and epidemiological studies. Her work repositions Black-authored texts as central rather than peripheral to the historical development of outbreak narratives. Its interdisciplinary approach ensures its impact in multiple academic fields, including literary studies, African American studies, and the medical humanities." - Margaret Jay Jessee, author of Female Physicians in American Literature: Abortion in 19th-Century Literature and Culture "Bezio offers an insightful and compelling way to argue for the relevance of early American texts in providing nuanced, epidemiologically attuned readings of outbreak stories in the present." - Louise Penner, author of Victorian Medicine and Social Reform: Florence Nightingale among the Novelists

