Daniel Defoe's A Journal of the Plague Year and Covid-19: A Tale of Two Pandemics

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Daniel Defoe's A Journal of the Plague Year has taken on a new relevance with the advent of the Covid-19 pandemic. Through an exploration of two chronologically distant societies in crisis, this study compares the attitudes, beliefs, and conduct of the public portrayed in the book and those in our own embattled Covid era. There are interesting similarities to note, with equivalents to the Covid-deniers and the anti-vaxxers to be found in Defoe's bleak vision of London in the 1660s as it descends into a state of chaos. JPY offers us some uncomfortable truths about human nature that resonate strongly in our own times, revealing how responding to a pandemic can bring out both the best and the worst in our character as we face up to a world where the old certainties no longer seem to apply. Pandemics expose the fault-lines in ideology, putting the social contract at risk - the question they pose is whether we can continue to rely on our current socio-political set-up or whether it requires a radical rethink. There is a pressing need for more debate on this issue, and this project is designed to make a case for that.

Author(s): Stuart Sim
Publisher: Palgrave Pivot
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 82
City: Cham

Acknowledgements
Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction: Societies in Crisis
Defoe and the Plague
Narrative and Pandemics
Pandemics, Epidemics, and the Endemic
References
Chapter 2: A Journal of the Plague Year in the Twenty-First Century
Pandemic Worlds
Living in a Pandemic World
References
Chapter 3: Narrating the Pandemic: A Journal of the Plague Year
Predestination as Explanation
H. F. and Guilt
Public Narrative and Private Narrative
Pepys in the Plague
Camus’s Plague
Conclusion
References
Chapter 4: Narrating the Pandemic: Covid-19
The Official Narrative
Conspiracy Narratives
Ideology and the Official Narrative
Covid and Guilt
Conclusion
References
Chapter 5: Pandemics in Perspective
The Politics of Pandemics
Pandemics and the Absurd
A Text for Our Times
‘Yet I Alive’
References
Index