Darrera modificació: 2009-08-06 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
Alcabes, Philip, Dread: How Fear and Fantasy Have Fueled Epidemics from the Black Death to the Avian Flu, Nova York, PublicAffairs, 2009, 336 pp., bibl., índ.
- Resum
- The average individual is far more likely to die in a car accident than from a communicable disease...yet we are still much more fearful of the epidemic. Even at our most level-headed, the thought of an epidemic can inspire terror. As Philip Alcabes persuasively argues in "Dread," our anxieties about epidemics are created not so much by the germ or microbe in question -- or the actual risks of contagion -- but by the unknown, the undesirable, and the misunderstood. Alcabes examines epidemics through history to show how they reflect the particular social and cultural anxieties of their times. From Typhoid Mary to bioterrorism, as new outbreaks are unleashed or imagined, new fears surface, new enemies are born, and new behaviors emerge. Dread dissects the fascinating story of the imagined epidemic: the one that we think is happening, or might happen; the one that disguises moral judgments and political agendas, the one that ultimately expresses our deepest fears.
Contents:
* Introduction: The Origins of Dread 1
* 1. The Sense of an Epidemic 7
* 2. Plague: Birth of the Model Epidemic 21
* 3. Cholera, Poverty, and the Politicized Epidemic 53
* 4. Germs, Science, and the Stranger 83
* 5. The Conquest of Contagion 119
* 6. Postmodern Epidemics 143
* 7. Managing the Imagined Epidemic 181
* Epilogue: The Risk-Free Life 215
- Matèries
- Medicina - Pesta i altres malalties
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