Skip to content

From the archives

Pitch Perfect?

On the promise and perils of global soccer

How Graphic Are These Novels?

Banned books deserve reviews too

The Canadian Conversation

A Polish journalist’s perspective on residential schools

La variole

Echoes of infections past

John Baglow

Plague: A Story of Smallpox in Montreal

Michael Bliss

University of Toronto Press

370 pages, softcover and ebook

Massive anti-vaccination street protests. Resistance, sometimes armed, to public health measures, including attempts to isolate the sick. Poor communications. Rumour. Misinformation. False vaccination certificates. Hesitant or hostile politicians. Police unwilling to enforce the law. Quacks touting alternative medicine. Insufficient resources in place.

No, not the COVID‑19 crisis of recent times. Rather, Montreal’s smallpox epidemic of 1885, which killed 2 percent of the population. If history rhymes, this reissue of Michael Bliss’s account of that terrible moment in Canadian history, Plague, with a short foreword by Gerald A. Evans, an epidemiologist at Queen’s University, is half of a perfect couplet. The late historian’s page-turning narrative from 1991 sets the scene; Evans draws the parallels to today; our recent memories do the rest.

In the case of COVID‑19 vaccinations, much of the resistance was based upon both disinformation and...

John Baglow is the author of Murmuration: Marianne’s Book, a collection of poetry.

Advertisement

Advertisement