Front Matter
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Table of Contents
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List of Illustrations
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Introduction: Cultural Responses to Catastrophes from Early Modern to Modern Times
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Temporality, Emotion, and Gender in Leonardo da Vinci’s Conceptualisation of Natural Violence
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Early Modern Community Formation Across Northern Europe: How and Why a Poet in Poland Engaged with the Delft Thunderclap of 1654
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Landscape as Wounded Body: Emotional Engagement in Visual Images of Floods
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Suffering Compatriots: Compassion, Catastrophe, and National Identification in the Netherlands in the Nineteenth Century
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Cultural Resilience during Nineteenth-Century Cholera Outbreaks in the Netherlands
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Dealing in Disasters: Selling Apocalyptic Interpretations of Disasters in the Sixteenth-Century Low Countries
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The Ten Plagues of the New World: The Sensemaking of Epidemic Depopulation in Sixteenth-Century Mesoamerica
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‘Hungry Balliz Wants Weel Fillin’: The Visualisation of the Great Irish Famine (1845–1851) and the Lancashire Cotton Famine (1861–1865) in the Victorian Illustrated Press
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Rinderpest in Dutch Regional Fiction: Community, Precariousness, and Blame
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Coping with Epidemics in Early Modern Chronicles, The Low Countries, 1500–1850
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Coverage in Dutch Newspapers of Earthquakes in Italy and Beyond before Lisbon 1755
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The Development of Disaster Prints and Publications in Japan, 1663–1923
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Breaking the Cycles of Catastrophe: Disaster, Time, and Nation in Dutch Flood Commemoration Books, 1757–1800
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Disaster Memory and ‘Banished Memory’: General Considerations and Case Studies from Europe and the United States (19th–21st Centuries)
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