Unmentionable Madness - Hancock, Christin L.; - Prospero Internetes Könyváruház

Unmentionable Madness: Gender, Disability, and Shame in the Malaria Treatment of Neurosyphilis
 
A termék adatai:

ISBN13:9780252046148
ISBN10:0252046145
Kötéstípus:Keménykötés
Terjedelem:192 oldal
Méret:229x152 mm
Súly:454 g
Nyelv:angol
Illusztrációk: 9 black and white photographs
700
Témakör:

Unmentionable Madness

Gender, Disability, and Shame in the Malaria Treatment of Neurosyphilis
 
Sorozatcím: Disability Histories;
Kiadás sorszáma: First Edition
Kiadó: University of Illinois Press
Megjelenés dátuma:
Kötetek száma: Hardback
 
Normál ár:

Kiadói listaár:
GBP 91.00
Becsült forint ár:
47 775 Ft (45 500 Ft + 5% áfa)
Miért becsült?
 
Az Ön ára:

42 998 (40 950 Ft + 5% áfa )
Kedvezmény(ek): 10% (kb. 4 778 Ft)
A kedvezmény csak az 'Értesítés a kedvenc témákról' hírlevelünk címzettjeinek rendeléseire érvényes.
Kattintson ide a feliratkozáshoz
 
Beszerezhetőség:

Még nem jelent meg, de rendelhető. A megjelenéstől számított néhány héten belül megérkezik.
 
  példányt

 
Hosszú leírás:
In 1930, neurosyphilis struck an unsuspecting Mabel Smith. Doctors at the Central State Hospital for the Insane in Indianapolis turned to malaria therapy--a radical treatment that relied on the belief that infection with malaria might save Smith’s life by attacking the bacterium that causes syphilis.

Christin L. Hancock looks through the lens of feminist disability to examine the popular but ethically suspect treatment and its consequences. As Hancock shows, the treatment’s purported success rate relied on the disabled minds and bodies of people incarcerated in mental hospitals. The backgrounds and identities of these patients reflected and perpetuated attitudes around poverty, gender, race, and disability while betraying authorities’ desire to protect the public from women and men perceived as abnormal, sexually tainted, and unworthy of community life.

Paying special attention to the patients’ voices and experiences, Unmentionable Madness offers a disability history that confronts the ethics of experimentation.



“The close-range analysis offers something new to the field by amplifying the perspective of a patient, and by extension other patients, whose experiences have been quantified but rarely confronted head on.”--Erika Dyck, coeditor of Expanding Mindscapes: A Global History of Psychedelics
Tartalomjegyzék:

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Mabel Smith, Ancestral Disability, and Shame

  1. Mabel Smith
  2. Dr. Walter L. Bruetsch
  3. Supplying the Research: Patient Experiences at CSH
  4. Race, Gender, and Neurosyphilis
  5. Dying from Neurosyphilis and the Silencing of Disability

Conclusion

Notes

Bibliography

Index