The book club format has enabled expert and nonexpert exploration of infection and epidemiology as encountered in popular literature. This exploration reveals that fiction focusing on apocalyptic disease often uses the zombie as embodiment of infection, as well as an exemplar of current knowledge on emerging disease.2018PMC6106442702
From Outbreak to The Walking Dead, apocalyptic narratives of infection, contagion, and global pandem...
Reseña del libro de Laura Hubner, Marcus Leaning, Paul Manning (eds.) (2015). The zombie reinaissanc...
Contemporary TV series are having a great success and influence in our postmodern societies. The zom...
The book club format has enabled expert and nonexpert exploration of infection and epidemiology as e...
During Bad Bugs Bookclub meetings, scientists and non-scientists discuss novels in which infectious ...
Dr. Joanna Verran, professor of microbiology, and Dr. Xavier Aldana Reyes, professor of English at M...
In Michael T. Osterholm and Mark Olshaker\u2019s book Deadliest Enemy: Our War against Killer Germs ...
Not so long ago zombies rarely shuffled out of B-grade horror movies and cult comic books, but today...
Covid-19, like other outbreaks of infectious diseases, has reawakened our interest in pandemic liter...
From Outbreak to The Walking Dead, apocalyptic narratives of infection, contagion and global pandemi...
Sitting at his laboratory bench, a scientist adds mutation after mutation to a strand of rabies viru...
In 2015, two librarians at the Hardin Library for the Health Sciences at the University of Iowa turn...
A book chapter in an edited collection on graphic medicine. From the publisher's website: The zo...
This paper will focus on how the rise in popularity of zombie literature in the 21st century is refl...
The Bad Bugs Bookclub was launched in 2009. It comprises scientists and non-scientists. The aim of t...
From Outbreak to The Walking Dead, apocalyptic narratives of infection, contagion, and global pandem...
Reseña del libro de Laura Hubner, Marcus Leaning, Paul Manning (eds.) (2015). The zombie reinaissanc...
Contemporary TV series are having a great success and influence in our postmodern societies. The zom...
The book club format has enabled expert and nonexpert exploration of infection and epidemiology as e...
During Bad Bugs Bookclub meetings, scientists and non-scientists discuss novels in which infectious ...
Dr. Joanna Verran, professor of microbiology, and Dr. Xavier Aldana Reyes, professor of English at M...
In Michael T. Osterholm and Mark Olshaker\u2019s book Deadliest Enemy: Our War against Killer Germs ...
Not so long ago zombies rarely shuffled out of B-grade horror movies and cult comic books, but today...
Covid-19, like other outbreaks of infectious diseases, has reawakened our interest in pandemic liter...
From Outbreak to The Walking Dead, apocalyptic narratives of infection, contagion and global pandemi...
Sitting at his laboratory bench, a scientist adds mutation after mutation to a strand of rabies viru...
In 2015, two librarians at the Hardin Library for the Health Sciences at the University of Iowa turn...
A book chapter in an edited collection on graphic medicine. From the publisher's website: The zo...
This paper will focus on how the rise in popularity of zombie literature in the 21st century is refl...
The Bad Bugs Bookclub was launched in 2009. It comprises scientists and non-scientists. The aim of t...
From Outbreak to The Walking Dead, apocalyptic narratives of infection, contagion, and global pandem...
Reseña del libro de Laura Hubner, Marcus Leaning, Paul Manning (eds.) (2015). The zombie reinaissanc...
Contemporary TV series are having a great success and influence in our postmodern societies. The zom...