Description

Book Synopsis
Covers the evolution of drug-resistant diseases and HIV/AIDS, along with data on mortality figures and other relevant statistics. This book chronicles perceptions and responses to plague and pestilence over two thousand years of western history.

Trade Review
"Hays has written a remarkable book. He too has a message: that epidemics are primarily dependent on poverty and that the West has consistently refused to accept this. Hays's book should be in every undergraduate library and be recommended reading, as a whole or in part, in a wide range of history of medicine courses."
* Isis *
"Required reading for any university-level course on the social history of disease and, indeed, of medicine generally. A masterly and reliable synthesis."

* American Historical Review *
"This is an impressive piece of work. It delivers more than it promises, for it not only treats epidemics and Western responses to them, but also discusses conflicting ideas about disease in relation to such topics as population, tuberculosis, technology, and empire—and all in a lucid, even-handed, and generous way. A fine and focused overview of a significant range of topics in the history of medicine."
-- M. Jeanne Peterson * Indiana University *
"In The Burdens of Disease J. N. Hays has synthesized a very large literature dealing with the history of medicine and disease. The result is an original and impressive book that deserves a wide readership. It provides a fascinating perspective on contemporary health issues."
-- Gerald Grob * Institute for Health Policy, Rutgers University *
"An impressive text. Hays has presented us with a well-researched and insightful thesis, which deserves a wide readership not only among the microbiologically inclined, but also among all those concerned with the impact of microbial disease on public policy."
* Bulletin of the Royal College of Pathologists *

Table of Contents

List of Tables ix
Acknowledgments xi


Introduction 1
One: The Western Inheritance: Greek and Roman Ideas about Disease 9
Two: Medieval Diseases and Responses 19
Three: The Great Plague Pandemic 37
Four: New Diseases and Transatlantic Exchanges 62
Five: Continuity and Change: Magic, Religion, Medicine, and Science, 500–1700 77
Six: Disease and the Enlightenment 105
Seven: Cholera and Sanitation 135
Eight: Tuberculosis and Poverty 155
Nine: Disease, Medicine, and Western Imperialism 179
Ten: The Scientific View of Disease and the Triumph of Professional Medicine 214
Eleven: The Apparent End of Epidemics 243
Twelve: Disease and Power 283

Notes 315
Suggestions for Further Reading 341
Index 357

The Burdens of Disease Epidemics and Human

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    A Paperback / softback by J. N. Hays

    15 in stock

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      View other formats and editions of The Burdens of Disease Epidemics and Human by J. N. Hays

      Publisher: Rutgers University Press
      Publication Date: 15/10/2009
      ISBN13: 9780813546131, 978-0813546131
      ISBN10: 0813546133

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Covers the evolution of drug-resistant diseases and HIV/AIDS, along with data on mortality figures and other relevant statistics. This book chronicles perceptions and responses to plague and pestilence over two thousand years of western history.

      Trade Review
      "Hays has written a remarkable book. He too has a message: that epidemics are primarily dependent on poverty and that the West has consistently refused to accept this. Hays's book should be in every undergraduate library and be recommended reading, as a whole or in part, in a wide range of history of medicine courses."
      * Isis *
      "Required reading for any university-level course on the social history of disease and, indeed, of medicine generally. A masterly and reliable synthesis."

      * American Historical Review *
      "This is an impressive piece of work. It delivers more than it promises, for it not only treats epidemics and Western responses to them, but also discusses conflicting ideas about disease in relation to such topics as population, tuberculosis, technology, and empire—and all in a lucid, even-handed, and generous way. A fine and focused overview of a significant range of topics in the history of medicine."
      -- M. Jeanne Peterson * Indiana University *
      "In The Burdens of Disease J. N. Hays has synthesized a very large literature dealing with the history of medicine and disease. The result is an original and impressive book that deserves a wide readership. It provides a fascinating perspective on contemporary health issues."
      -- Gerald Grob * Institute for Health Policy, Rutgers University *
      "An impressive text. Hays has presented us with a well-researched and insightful thesis, which deserves a wide readership not only among the microbiologically inclined, but also among all those concerned with the impact of microbial disease on public policy."
      * Bulletin of the Royal College of Pathologists *

      Table of Contents

      List of Tables ix
      Acknowledgments xi


      Introduction 1
      One: The Western Inheritance: Greek and Roman Ideas about Disease 9
      Two: Medieval Diseases and Responses 19
      Three: The Great Plague Pandemic 37
      Four: New Diseases and Transatlantic Exchanges 62
      Five: Continuity and Change: Magic, Religion, Medicine, and Science, 500–1700 77
      Six: Disease and the Enlightenment 105
      Seven: Cholera and Sanitation 135
      Eight: Tuberculosis and Poverty 155
      Nine: Disease, Medicine, and Western Imperialism 179
      Ten: The Scientific View of Disease and the Triumph of Professional Medicine 214
      Eleven: The Apparent End of Epidemics 243
      Twelve: Disease and Power 283

      Notes 315
      Suggestions for Further Reading 341
      Index 357

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