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  2. The Scarlet Plague - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Scarlet_Plague

    The Scarlet Plague is a post-apocalyptic fiction novel by American writer Jack London, originally published in The London Magazine in 1912. The book was noted in 2020 as having been very similar to the COVID-19 pandemic, especially given London wrote it at a time when the world was not as quickly connected by travel as it is today.

  3. Joshua Glenn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joshua_Glenn

    These included works by authors not normally thought to be science fiction authors--Jack London's The Scarlet Plague and Rudyard Kipling's With the Night Mail. In 2022 MIT Press invited Glenn to edit a new series exploring the Radium Age and its significance, bringing ten other titles from the Radium Age back into print. [33]

  4. Disease in fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disease_in_fiction

    Jack London's 1912 The Scarlet Plague was reprinted in the February 1949 issue of Famous Fantastic Mysteries. Diseases, especially if infectious, have long been popular themes and plot devices in fiction. [1] [7] Daniel Defoe's pioneering 1722 A Journal of the Plague Year is a fictional diary of a man's life during the plague year of 1665 in ...

  5. The Masque of the Red Death in popular culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Masque_of_the_Red...

    Jack London's novella The Scarlet Plague (1912) was inspired in part by Poe's story. [1] In the book, much of humanity has been wiped out by a disease sometimes referred to as "Red Death". Stephen King's novel The Shining contains several allusions to the story. For example, the line "and the red death held sway over all" seems to reference the ...

  6. Red plague - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_plague

    Red plague can refer to the following diseases: Smallpox; Erysipelas; Vibriosis, a systemic bacterial infection of marine and estuarine fishes, caused by the Vibrio genus. Also known as red pest, red boil, or saltwater furunculosis. It can also have the following meanings: Red plague (corrosion), the corrosion of silver-plated copper

  7. Yersinia pestis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yersinia_pestis

    Yersinia pestis (Y. pestis; formerly Pasteurella pestis) is a gram-negative, non-motile, coccobacillus bacterium without spores that is related to both Yersinia enterocolitica and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, the pathogen from which Y. pestis evolved [1] [2] and responsible for the Far East scarlet-like fever.

  8. Plague cross - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plague_cross

    The term plague cross can refer to either a mark placed on a building occupied by victims of plague; or a permanent structure erected, to enable plague sufferers to trade while minimising the risk of contagion. A wide variety of plague cross existed in Britain and elsewhere in Europe, until the plague largely disappeared by the eighteenth century.

  9. Talk:The Scarlet Plague - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:The_Scarlet_Plague

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