Epidemic Disease and Human Understanding
McFarland & Co Inc (Verlag)
978-0-7864-2506-8 (ISBN)
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For more than three thousand years of recorded history, human beings have been struggling to understand the epidemic - the rapid spread of a contagious disease throughout a human population. This book draws on an extensive list of primary texts to present a comprehensive history of epidemiological thought over the last three millennia. The book is primarily concerned with the human experience of epidemic disease and the various means through which this experience has been conceptualized and communicated. The discussion begins with the writers of antiquity, and Part I examines the religious, mythological and philosophical paradigms that ancient peoples used to comprehend and interpret epidemic disease. This dogmatic approach to the nature of disease is traced from Greco-Roman times to the present. Gradually, many people came to interpret the epidemic experience as a natural phenomenon rather than an instrument of divine purpose. The important transition from an emphasis on received doctrine to one on direct experience is the focus of Part II. Famous historical documents, such as Thucydides description of the plague of Athens in 430 B.C.E and Giovanni Boccaccio's description of the Black Death in The Decameron, are used to illuminate this transition. The systematic examination of biomedical phenomena that began in the seventeenth century and has developed into the complex field of modern medicine is the focus of Part III. Finally, Part IV considers the ways in which epidemic disease has been treated in various works of literature. The discussion includes factual eyewitness accounts as well as such popular works of fiction as Sinclair Lewis' Arrowsmith and Albert Camus' The Plague. In surveying human responses to endemic disease, the book relates three sub-genres of epidemiological writing to one another: the encyclopedia, the intellectual history, and the biographical collection. In all, this work covers one dozen illnesses, more than thirty select authors, and nearly fifty primary works.
Charles De Paolo, the author of numerous books, is a professor of English at Manhattan Community College, the City University of New York. He lives in Aberdeen, New Jersey.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction
Part I: The Pre-Conceptual Modality
1. The Hands of Dagon: Epidemic Anomalies in I Samuel 5–6
2. The Fierce Onslaught of Fate: Greco-Roman Pre-Conceptuality
3. The Sins of the Nation: Early Christian Pre-Conceptuality
Part II: The Observational Modality
4. Set Down Its Nature: Eyewitness Reporting in the Age of Pericles
5. The Province of Human Reasoning: Eyewitness Reporting and the Plague of Justinian
6. The Vast Estates: The Decameron of Giovanni Boccaccio
Part III: The Investigative Modality
7. Persons of Thought: Nathaniel Hodges and the London Plague of 1664–1665
8. The Topography of Inference
9. From Etiology to Synergy
Part IV: Eyewitness Reporting, Language, and Imaginative Writing
10. The Democracy of Affliction: Modern Eyewitness Reporting
11. The Language of Reason: Plague Extrapolations in Modern Fiction
12. A Just and Proper Tale: Figurative Language and Epidemiological Discourse
13. A Tangible Something: The Yellow Fever Construct
14. The Dynamics of Fear and the Mechanisms of Resistance
Works Cited
Index
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 30.7.2006 |
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Zusatzinfo | notes, bibliography, index |
Verlagsort | Jefferson, NC |
Sprache | englisch |
Gewicht | 377 g |
Themenwelt | Studium ► Querschnittsbereiche ► Epidemiologie / Med. Biometrie |
ISBN-10 | 0-7864-2506-7 / 0786425067 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-7864-2506-8 / 9780786425068 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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