The Dread Disease: Cancer And Modern American Culture

E-Book Overview

Cancer is that "loathsome beast, which seized upon the breast, drove its long claws into the surrounding tissues, derived its sustenance by sucking out the juices of its victims, and never even relaxed its hold in death," a turn-of-the-century physician recorded. Even today cancer affects the popular imagination with dread. In a subtle and penetrating cultural history, James Patterson examines reactions to the disease through a century of American life. The modern American preoccupation with cancer was apparent during the widely publicized illness and death from that ailment of Ulysses S. Grant in 1885. Awareness of the disease soon figured heavily in the public consciousness, and individual reactions to it continue to reveal broader tensions within American society. Patterson examines responses to cancer by researchers and physicians, quacks and faith healers, by the multitude who have heard sensational media reports of "cures," as well as by many who have had firsthand experiences with the disease. Optimistic attitudes of many experts contrast sharply with the skepticism of large segments of the population--often the less wealthy and the less educated--that reject the claims of medical science and resist the advice or, some argue, the paternalistic dictates of the government-supported cancer research establishment. Expanding expectations of a cure from a confident medical profession; the rise of a government-supported Cancer Establishment managing a large research empire; the emergence of a "cancer counterculture"; a new emphasis on prevention through control of the environment and the self; and the private fears and pessimism of millions of Americans form a telling history of American social patterns. Whether the issue is smoking, pollution, or regular checkups, attitudes toward cancer reflect more general views on medicine, public policy, and illness, as well as on death and dying. This century has witnessed both a biomedical revolution and a vastly increased role of the state in the private lives of citizens; but not everyone has bought the medical package, and many have little faith in government intervention. Readers interested in the cultural dimensions of science and medicine as well as historians, sociologists, and political scientists will be enlightened and challenged by The Dread Disease.

E-Book Content

THE DREAD DISEASE [To view this image, refer to the print version of this title.] Cartoon booklet from the 1950S. From the National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, Maryland. THE DREAD DISEASE Cancer and Modern American Culture JAMES T. PATTERSON HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS LONDON, ENGLAND Copyright © 1987 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 Design by Joyce C. Weston Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Patterson, James T. The dread disease. Bibliography: p. Includes index. I. Cancer-United States-History-20th century. 2. Cancer-United States-Public opinion. 3. Public opinion-United States. I. Title. [DNLM: I. Attitude to Health-history-United States. 2. Culture-United States. 3. Neoplasms-history-United States. QZ II AAI P3d] RC276.P38 19 87 362.1'96994'00973 87- 160 ISBN 0-674-21625-3 (alk. paper) (cloth) ISBN 0-674-21626-1 (paper) Contents Preface Vlt Acknowledgments Xl Prologue: The Travail of General Grant I I Cancerphobia in the Late Nineteenth Century The Rise of the Doctors 2 The Alliance against Cancer 3 4 The Wilderness Years 56 88 Government Joins the Fight 5 6 36 I I4 Hymns to Science and Prayers to God The Research Explosion 7
You might also like

Survival And Austere Medicine: An Introduction
Authors: The Remote , Austere , Wilderness and Third World Medicine Forum    255    0


Comprehensive Clinical Psychology
Authors: Bellack A.S. , Hersen M. (eds.)    277    0


Statistical Modeling For Biomedical Researchers
Authors: William D. Dupont    145    0



Encyclopedia Of Public Health (d-k)
Authors: Lester Breslow    135    0



Stem Cell Factor
Authors: Johan Lennartsson    223    0


Biosignal And Biomedical Image Processing
Authors: Semmlow J.    174    0



Essential Neurology
Authors: Iain Wilkinson , Graham Lennox    168    0