[A] deeply erudite and richly illuminating study of images of venereal disease in British literature and visual art in the 'long eighteenth century' that began with the restoration of the monarchy in 1660."Fintan O'Toole,
New York Review of Books"Noelle Gallagher's fascinating and entertaining new book,
Itch, Clap, Pox, is not so much about the reality of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) during the 18th century as it is about how STIs were imaginatively constructed during the period. The book is important and successful because it looks at how artists and writers used 'venereal disease' (Gallagher intentionally deploys 18th-century terms throughout) to negotiate issues such as sexism, capitalism, nationalism, and racism."Norbert Schurer,
Los Angeles Review of Books"Gallagher's lively account of literary works and visual imagery points us to the larger significance of what might appear randomly unpleasant examples. She suggests there is more to be done in connecting the material explored in this book with representations of infection in other periods; but that is to miss the particularity, and oddity, almost relish, that we find in literary and artistic expression between 1660 and 1800."Norma Clarke,
TLS"As Noelle Gallagher shows in her elegant book, venereal disease was intellectually and imaginatively useful in this period: the obscurity, changeability and shiftiness people saw in its symptoms could be turned outwards. . . . The great appeal of Gallagher's approach is that she recognises [the eighteenth century's] weirdness. . . . The pox and the clap altered bodies but they also altered minds, infiltrating language and image: like conspiracies, they made everything seem connected."Clare Bucknell,
London Review of BooksNoelle Gallaghers new book, Itch, Clap, Pox: Venereal Disease in the Eighteenth-Century Imagination, is a surprising and gripping study of this dark century, both its humour and its discontents
Joseph Darlington,
The Cambridge Quarterly[A] polished and enjoyable mapping of art and the literature in relation to this most popular of subjects from the period in questionJessica Borge,
Metascience"Gallagher adds fascinating details to previously broad-stroke work on this topic, providing a valuable resource for scholars of literature and history."Dr. Alanna Skuse,
Social History of Medicine"[U]nquestionably successful in its endeavour to reveal how venereal disease manifested itself in cultural and creative exchanges of the eighteenth century"Ashleigh Blackwood,
The ShandeanThe books numerous lively and scintillating vignettes should make the book appealing to undergraduates and the general public. Gallagher has made a highly important and engaging contribution to our understanding of venereal disease in the British imagination.Katherine Paugh,
Journal of Modern HistoryElegantly written...Noelle Gallagher deftly demonstrates the ubiquity and flexibility of venereal disease in imaginative British sources of the long eighteenth century [and] offers readings of an extraordinary range of artistic and literary sources from the period.Emily Cock,
Journal of British Studiesa polished and enjoyable mapping of art and the literature in relation to this most popular of subjects from the period in question Jessica Borge, Metascience
"A fascinating exploration, rich in unexpected finds and insightful commentaries. Noelle Duckmann Gallagher is a smart and accomplished guide to eighteenth-century disease and its surprising array of meanings." - Thomas Keymer, University of Toronto
"Lively and lucid, rigorous and wide-ranging,
Itch, Clap, Poxis essential reading for anyone interested in the metaphorics and cultures of disease in the literature and art of the British long eighteenth century." - Professor Clark Lawlor, Author of
Consumption and Literature: The Making of the Romantic Disease."In eighteenth-century Britain, what do high-ranking men, prostitutes, foreigners and those with deformities, especially disfigured noses, have in common? Venereal disease, as Gallagher demonstrates in this wonderfully original, groundbreaking work."Peter Sabor, McGill University
"Tainted love, self-destructing bodies, and corrupted nationhood - Noelle Gallagher's richly-documented study reveals the pervasive grip of venereal disease on the 18th-century fictional imagination."Faramerz Dabhoiwala, author of
The Origins of Sex: A History of the First Sexual Revolution"Books aboutsex and illness in the long eighteenth century routinelyissue from prestigious academic presses, yet each time something more continues to cry out to be said.
Itch, Clap, Poxadroitlydemonstrates how far the subject is from being exhausted." -George Rousseau, co-author of
Gout: The Patrician Malady, Yale University Press