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Intrusive Interventions: Public Health, Domestic Space, and Infectious Disease Surveillance in England, 1840-1914 [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 292 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 604 g, 19 b/w, 12 line illus.
  • Serija: Rochester Studies in Medical History
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Oct-2015
  • Leidėjas: University of Rochester Press
  • ISBN-10: 1580465277
  • ISBN-13: 9781580465274
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 292 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 604 g, 19 b/w, 12 line illus.
  • Serija: Rochester Studies in Medical History
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Oct-2015
  • Leidėjas: University of Rochester Press
  • ISBN-10: 1580465277
  • ISBN-13: 9781580465274
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The politics of public health in modern democracies concerns the balance between rights and responsibilities. This equilibrium of citizenship is under perpetual negotiation, but it was particularly intense in mid-nineteenth-century Britain when public health became deeply embedded as a state practice. Using extensive archival research, Intrusive Interventions examines the contested realm of Victorian liberal subjectivity through an interconnected group of policies: infectious disease reporting, domestic quarantine, mandatory removal to isolation hospital, contact tracing, and the disinfection of homes and belongings. These techniques of infectious disease surveillance eventually became one of the most powerful and controversial set of tools in modern public health. One of the crucial questions for liberal democracies has been how the state relates to the private family in shaping duties, responsibilities, rights, and needs. Intrusive Interventions argues that the gaze of public health was retrained onto everyday behaviors and demonstrates that infectious disease surveillance attempted to govern through the agency of family and through the concept of domesticity. This fresh interpretation of public health practice during the Victorian and Edwardian periods complements studies that have examined domestic visiting, the infant welfare movement, child protection, and school welfare. Graham Mooney is an assistant professor at the Institute of the History of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University.

This book examines the advent, during the mid-nineteenth century in Britain, of techniques of infectious disease surveillance, now one of the most powerful set of tools in modern public health.

Recenzijos

Intrusive Interventions is sure to find a receptive readership among historians of medicine, urban historians, and historians of late nineteenth- and early twentieth -century Britain more generally. It is conceptually sophisticated, based on a substantial body of primary research and engagingly written. * JOURNAL OF SOCIAL HISTORY * A valuable addition to the literature on the history of public health, but also provides a critical window into the more personal relationships between patients, doctors, public health officials and legislators. * FAMILY & COMMUNITY HISTORY * Although Mooney's work is framed by the civic-focused ideas that underpinned public health in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, his groundbreaking focus is the materiality and performative aspects of infectious-disease surveillance ... Intrusive Interventions is an exciting and insightful contribution to the history of public health and health care in Britain. * BRITISH JOURNAL FOR THE HISTORY OF SCIENCE * What Mooney unravels in Intrusive Interventions is exciting and insightful. . . . [ T]his is the most important book on Victorian public health since Worboys's Spreading Germs. * MEDICAL HISTORY *

Acknowledgments ix
Abbreviations xiii
Introduction 1(18)
Part One Making Infectious Disease Surveillance
1 Finding Disease in the Victorian City
19(21)
2 "These Bastard Laws": Infectious Disease, Liberty, and Localism
40(29)
Part Two Spaces of Risk and Opportunity
3 Sequestration and Permeability: Isolation Hospitals
69(24)
4 "Combustible Material": Classrooms, Contact Tracing, and Following-Up
93(28)
5 Disinfection, Domestic Space, and the Laboratory
121(33)
6 Rules for Home Living: Tuberculosis and the Consumption of Self-Help
154(25)
Conclusion 179(4)
Notes 183(50)
Bibliography 233(32)
Index 265