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Health in the City: Race, Poverty, and the Negotiation of Women's Health in New York City, 1915-1930

Contributor(s): Hart, Tanya (Author)

ISBN: 9781479867998

Publisher: New York University Press

Hardcover
$66.00
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Pub Date: May 1, 2015

Dewey: 362.10420974

LCCN: 2015000476

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 1.00" H x 9.10" L x 6.20" W ( 1.20 lbs) 336 pages

Series: Culture, Labor, History

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

Shortly after the dawn of the twentieth century, the New York City Department of Health decided to address what it perceived as the racial nature of health. It delivered heavily racialized care in different neighborhoods throughout the city: syphillis treatment among African Americans, tuberculosis for Italian Americans, and so on. It was a challenging and ambitious program, dangerous for the providers, and troublingly reductive for the patients. Nevertheless, poor and working-class African American, British West Indian, and Southern Italian women all received some of the nation's best health care during this period.

Health in the City challenges traditional ideas of early twentieth-century urban black health care by showing a program that was simultaneously racialized and cutting-edge. It reveals that even the most well-meaning public health programs may inadvertently reinforce perceptions of inferiority that they were created to fix.

Brief description: Tanya Hart is an Associate Professor in the Department of History at Pepperdine University (CA).

Review Quotes: "Harts book offers important insights into the gendered and racialized notions of health and citizenship that animated public health programs in the early decades of the twentieth century and the attitudes and beliefs of the women who experienced these efforts."-- "Journal of the History of Medicine and Science"

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