Theatres of Contagion is a rich and wide-ranging collection of essays that offers new and engaging perspectives on theatre’s multiple relationships with contagion. The volume traverses historical periods from the early modern to the contemporary, a diverse range of genres and practices, on and off-stage, and draws on an array of disciplines. This expansive design, in tandem with individual authors’ detailed analyses of specific practices and histories, results in a collection that nuances understandings of how theatre has conceived contagion’s operation, its effects and affects, and vital entanglements in culture and socio-political structures.