Book Cover

Framing Disease: Studies in Cultural History

Contributor(s): Rosenberg, Charles E (Editor)

ISBN: 9780813517575

Publisher: Rutgers University Press

Binding Types:

$41.95
$54.90 (Final Price)
$53.70 (100+ copies: $52.95)
List/retail price:
$41.95
- +
Buy

Pub Date: March 1, 1992

Dewey: 610.9

LCCN: 91019164

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.85" H x 9.04" L x 5.96" W ( 1.17 lbs) 368 pages

Series: Health and Medicine in American Society

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: Many diseases discussed here--endstage renal disease, rheumatic fever, parasitic infectious diseases, coronary thrombosis--came to be defined, redefined, and renamed over the course of several centuries. As these essays show, the concept of disease has also been used to frame culturally resonant behaviors: suicide, homosexuality, anorexia nervosa, chronic fatigue syndrome. Disease is also framed by public policy, as the cases of industrial disability and of forensic psychiatry demonstrate. Medical institutions, as managers of people with disease, come to have vested interests in diagnoses, as the histories of facilities to treat tuberculosis or epilepsy reveal. Ultimately, the existence and conquest of disease serves to frame a society's sense of its own "healthiness" and to give direction to social reforms.

Worth Considering
Product successfully added to cart!