The Ailing City ? Health, Tuberculosis, and Culture in Buenos Aires, 1870?1950 - Armus, Diego; - Prospero Internet Bookshop

The Ailing City ? Health, Tuberculosis, and Culture in Buenos Aires, 1870?1950: Health, Tuberculosis, and Culture in Buenos Aires, 1870?1950
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9780822349990
ISBN10:082234999X
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:432 pages
Size:250x150x15 mm
Weight:721 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 50 illustrations
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The Ailing City ? Health, Tuberculosis, and Culture in Buenos Aires, 1870?1950

Health, Tuberculosis, and Culture in Buenos Aires, 1870?1950
 
Publisher: MD ? Duke University Press
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Cloth over boards
 
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GBP 112.00
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Long description:
For decades, tuberculosis in Buenos Aires was more than a dangerous bacillus. It was also an anxious state of mind shaped not only by fears of contagion and death but also by broader social and cultural concerns. These worries included changing work routines, rapid urban growth and its consequences for housing and living conditions, efforts to build a healthy “national race,” and shifting notions of normality and pathology. In The Ailing City, the historian Diego Armus explores the metaphors, state policies, and experiences associated with tuberculosis in Buenos Aires between 1870 and 1950. During those years, the disease was conspicuous and frightening, and biomedicine was unable to offer an effective cure. Against the background of the global history of tuberculosis, Armus focuses on the making and consolidation of medicalized urban life in the Argentine capital. He discusses the state’s intrusion into private lives and the ways that those suffering from the disease accommodated and resisted official attempts to care for them and to reform and control their morality, sociability, sexuality, and daily habits. The Ailing City is based on an impressive array of sources, including literature, journalism, labor press, medical journals, tango lyrics, films, advertising, imagery, statistics, official reports, and oral history. It offers a unique perspective on the emergence of modernity in a cosmopolitan city on the periphery of world capitalism.


“This book is a valuable addition to the history of Buenos Aires and to the history of medicine. Instructors in these fields as well as in urban studies will welcome its appearance in English.”