
From Victorian Anxieties About Syphilis To The Current Hysteria Over Herpes And Aids, The History Of Venereal Disease In America Forces Us To Examine Social Attitudes As Well As Purely Medical Concerns. In No Magic Bullet, Allan M. Brandt Recounts The Various Medical, Military, And Public Health Responses That Have Arisen Over The Years--a Broad Spectrum That Ranges From The Incarceration Of Prostitutes During World War I To The Establishment Of Required Premarital Blood Tests. Brandt Demonstrates That Americans' Concerns About Venereal Disease Have Centered Around A Set Of Social And Cultural Values Related To Sexuality, Gender, Ethnicity, And Class. At The Heart Of Our Efforts To Combat These Infections, He Argues, Has Been The Tendency To View Venereal Disease As Both A Punishment For Sexual Misconduct And An Index Of Social Decay. This Tension Between Medical And Moral Approaches Has Significantly Impeded Efforts To Develop Magic Bullets--drugs That Would Rid Us Of The Disease--as Well As Effective Policies For Controlling The Infections' Spread. In This 35th Anniversary Edition Of No Magic Bullet, Brandt Reflects On Recent Scholarship, The Persistence Of Sexually Transmitted Diseases, And The Trajectory Of The Hiv Epidemic, As They Have Informed Contemporary Conceptions Of Biomedicine And Global Health.
This work investigates how American social and cultural values regarding sexuality, gender, and class have historically shaped and often hindered the medical response to venereal disease. Allan M. Brandt, a historian of medicine and science, utilizes extensive archival research and public health records to demonstrate that venereal disease has frequently been framed as a moral failing rather than a purely biological challenge. He argues that this persistent tension between moral judgment and clinical intervention has consistently undermined the development and implementation of effective public health policies.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and public health professionals recognize this work as a foundational text for understanding the social history of medicine in the United States. Readers frequently note the clarity of the prose and the author's ability to synthesize complex cultural shifts with clinical history.
Page Count:
320
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190863439
ISBN-13:
9780190863432
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