Outcast
“Outcast is remarkable. It is a powerful, revelatory and truly shocking account spanning across time and place, then and still now, grippingly and humanely recounted.”—Philippe Sands
Outcast: A History of Leprosy, Humanity, and the Modern World reveals leprosy as the world’s foundational stigma, underlying the colonialism, exclusion, and exploitation that has shaped contemporary life.
After hearing leprosy being used as an anti-immigration dog whistle, Oliver Basciano began a journey into the past, uncovering how this ancient disease has been weaponized, used to justify forced exile and social ostracism around the world. Traveling from the last leprosarium in Europe to remote villages in Mozambique, from Siberian settlements to Brazil’s hinterlands, Basciano builds a history that centers the voices of patients and those forced into the colony system. Along the way, he finds communities formed in exile, patient activism, and the persistent human capacity for joy.
In this pulsating, compassionate book, the trope of medieval suffering is transformed into a bitingly relevant study of hope and solidarity.
Praise
“It is impossible not to be moved by the lives unfolding in these pages. . . . This is an ambitious, fascinating and rich journey. A cool, expansive assessment of us as humans—cruel, frightened, hasty and merciless but also resilient, creative and capable of forging remarkable community bonds.”—Leila Aboulela
“Written with a meticulous attentiveness that never loses sight of the individual, Outcast maps epidemiology onto colonial history, allowing the voices of those who have lived with leprosy, across the oceans and the centuries, to emerge in irrepressible chorus.”—William Atkins
“Nothing is more central to our global system, and its myriad crises, than the question of exclusion—who is granted full humanity, and who is rendered invisible. . . . In Oliver Basciano’s capable and careful hands . . . the story of a disease becomes a page-turner about the nature of life itself.”—Vincent Bevins