01451nam a22001937a 4500003000400000005001700004008004100021020001800062040001000080082001500090100002700105245002400132260003000156300001000186365003700196505098100233600001701214700002601231OSt20220203142821.0220127b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d a9781138326125 ckrvia a711.1bENG1 aEngelmann, Lukas (Ed.)10aPlague and the City aNew YorkbRoutledgec2019 a176p. aRs.bRs. 3663cRs.d31eRs. 2528 aIntroduction: The Plague and the City in History: Lukas Engelmann, John Henderson and Christos Lynteris p.1, Chapter 1: ‘Great Stenches, Horrible Sights and Deadly Abominations’: Butchery and the Battle Against Plague in Late Medieval English Towns by Carole Rawcliffe p.18, Chapter 2: Plague in Early Modern London: Chronologies, Localities, and Environments by Vanessa Harding p.39, Chapter 3: ‘Filth is the Mother of Corruption’: Plague and the Built Environment in Early Modern Florence by John Henderson p.69, Chapter 4: Plague Views: Epidemics, Photography, and the Ruined City by Robert Peckham p.91, Chapter 5: The Disease Map and the City: Desire and Imitation in the Bombay Plague, 1896-1914 by Nicholas H. A. Evans p.116, Chapter 6: ‘A Source of Sickness’. Photographic Mapping of the Plague in Honolulu in 1900 by Lukas Engelmann p.139, Chapter 7: Public Culture and the Spectacle of Epidemic Disease in Rabat and Casablanca by Branwyn Poleykett p.15910aUrban Theory1 aHenderson, John (Ed.)