The Black Death, and The Dancing Mania

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Synopsis

J. F. C. Hecker's The Black Death, and The Dancing Mania is a pioneering nineteenth-century medical-historical study of epidemic catastrophe and collective disorder. Its first part reconstructs the fourteenth-century plague in Europe, attending to symptoms, mortality, social disintegration, religious panic, and persecution; the second examines the strange outbreaks of compulsive dancing that convulsed medieval and early modern communities. Written in a sober, documentary style, the book stands at the intersection of historiography, pathology, and moral psychology, anticipating later studies of mass hysteria, contagion, and crisis culture. Hecker was a German physician and medical historian whose training enabled him to read medieval chronicles not merely as antiquarian records but as evidence of disease, fear, and public response. Living in an age increasingly concerned with epidemiology and social medicine, he brought clinical curiosity to historical calamity, seeking patterns in events that earlier writers had treated as supernatural or merely anecdotal. This volume is recommended to readers interested in plague literature, the history of medicine, medieval society, and the psychology of crowds. Though marked by its period, it remains intellectually valuable for its disciplined synthesis of medical observation and historical imagination.

Publisher information

  • Publisher: Good Press
  • ISBN: 9788027287406
  • Dimensions: 229 x 152 x 4 mm
  • Weight: 131g
  • Languages: English