| Disease Apart: Leprosy in the Modern World | Hardcoverby Tony Gould (Author)
| List Price: | $30.00 | | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| | Binding: | Hardcover | | Publisher: | St. Martins Press | | Page Count: | 420 Pages | | Publication Date: | January 01, 2005 | | Sales Rank: | 2,756,208nd |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description This fascinating cultural and medical history of leprosy enriches our understanding of a still-feared biblical disease.It is a condition shrouded for centuries in mystery, legend, and religious fanaticism. Societies the world over have vilified its sufferers: by the sheer accident of mycobacterial infection, they have been condemned to exile and imprisonment—illness itself considered evidence of moral taint.Over the last 200 years, the story of leprosy has witnessed dramatic reversals in terms of both scientific theory and public opinion. In A DISEASE APART, Tony Gould traces the history of this compelling period through the lives of individual men and women: intrepid doctors, researchers, and missionaries, and a vast spectrum of patients.We meet such pioneers of treatment as the Norwegian microbe hunter, Armauer Hansen. Though Hansen discovered the leprosy bacillus in l873, the 'heredity vs. contagion' debate raged on for decades. Meanwhile, across the world, Belgian Catholic missionary Father Damien became an international celebrity tending to his stricken flock at the Hawaiian settlement of Molokai. He contracted the disease himself. To the British, leprosy posed an "imperial danger" to their sprawling colonial system. In the l920s Sir Leonard Rogers of the Indian Medical Service found that the ancient Hindu treatment of chaulmoogra oil could be used in an injectable form. The Cajun bayou saw the inspiring rise of leprosy’s most zealous campaigner of all: a patient. At Carville, Louisiana, a Jewish Texan pharmacist named Stanley Stein was transformed by leprosy into an eloquent editor and writer. He ultimately became a thorn in the side of the U.S. Public Heath Department and a close friend of Tallulah Bankhead.The personalities met on this journey are remarkable and their stories unfold against the backgrounds of Norway, Hawaii, the Philippines, Japan, South Africa, Canada, Nigeria, Nepal and Louisiana. Although since the l950s drugs treatments have been able to cure cases caught early—and arrest advanced cases—leprosy remains a subject mired in ignorance. In this superb and enlightened book, Tony Gould throws light into the shadows. |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.5 based on 5 reviews)
| politics, not medicine by Wilhelmina (Minnesota) 3 Stars June 27, 2009 This is a thoroughly researched book, to the point of excruciatingly boring detail, that discusses the social and political implications of leprosy throughout history. There is very little discussion of the medical side of the disease, of which the author doesn't seem to have much grasp - A glaring omission considering that we hear far more than we need to about the personal lives of leading leprosy researchers, celebrity sufferers, and government administrators. There were some bizarre throwaway lines such as "Biblical leprosy was probably a different disease than true leprosy". Huh? I can accept that provided there was some explanation / validation. (which wasn't done). There is no discussion at all about leprosy medical research except for some faint condemnation about the cushy dwellings of researchers in leper colonies compared to the dreadful living conditions of the patients. This is not a book to be taken lightly - it's far too complex, and meandering, for a quick run-through. Read it if you like politics more than medicine. Otherwise, expect to be put to sleep (as I was, repeatedly).
| | Fascinating Book by John O. Meekins IV (Ocala, Florida) 5 Stars June 23, 2009 There have been many books written about Leprosy a.k.a. Hansen's Disease over the years. Mr. Gould appears to have read many of the books about all the interesting people afflicted with the disease and the caretakers of people with Hansen's Disease over the past couple hundred years. A Disease Apart: Leprosy in the Modern World seems to be a condensed version of those many books broken down by chapter. This book is a great read for history buffs and anyone who thinks they might be interested in reading about Leprosy for the first time.
| | Possibly the best book on the disease history. by Kathryn L. Miller (Ohio) 5 Stars April 22, 2008 This book is far and away the best look at the history of the disease, colonies, and treatment, out there. On top of being extremely informative, it is not a dry read in the least bit. I finished it in a day. I particularly enjoyed the time taken to deal with Carville, it's founding and patients, particularly the amazing Stanley Stein. If a person has any interest in the disease at all, this book needs to be on their shelf.
| | Leprosy: not just a bygone disease by D. Donovan, Editor/Sr. Reviewer (California, USA) 5 Stars April 22, 2006 Hear the world 'leprosy' and you tend to think of bygone eras and diseases no longer threatening modern societies - but A DISEASE APART: LEPROSY IN THE MODERN WORLD shows otherwise, tracing the history of leprosy and surveying the legends, realities, and medical concerns surrounding the disease. From pioneers of early treatments and diagnosis to local epidemics of leprosy, chapters survey the controversies, research, and health risks which have surrounded leprosy. Treatments for cases caught early have been in effect since the 1950s - but there's still lots of misunderstanding and myth surrounding leprosy - and thus the need for this detailed medical history.
| | A Special Disease by R. Hardy (Columbus, Mississippi USA) 5 Stars September 11, 2005 Everyone knows what you mean if you refer to someone as a leper: someone others shun. There are worse diseases, more painful ones, more numerous ones, and many more contagious ones, but leprosy was a horror of its own. This was largely because leprosy was visible; blotchy skin, bloated face, extremities dissolving away. Lepers had more problems in that they lost their sight, but more particularly they lost their sense of touch, and with it the capacity to feel pain, the blessing in disguise that protects us from the world's blows. It is a terrible disease, but the horror it inspired in others made it unique. In _A Disease Apart: Leprosy in the Modern World_ (St. Martin's Press), Tony Gould shows that in the past couple of hundred years, the disease has lost its capacity to shock. It still exists, but there are good treatments and we know that sufferers need not be objects of fear or horror, and that they are certainly not victims of some sort of curse from gods of any type. Gould has not pointedly drawn comparisons to AIDS in our own time, but the similar arc of social reaction to the disease is clear.
Much of what people know about leprosy comes from the Bible, and it certainly inspired the missionaries in their efforts against the disease, but probably those missionaries were fighting a different one than that known in Old Testament times and locales. The involvement of Christianity by means of missionaries to sufferers is a theme throughout this book. One victim himself wrote, "There is no mission to the tubercular, no mission to the diabetics, no mission to syphilitics.... there seems to be some special reward for working with 'lepers'." Such missions are not now fashionable, and we know missionaries are not an unalloyed force for good. Gould has focused in on one region after another to tell histories that all include the cruel management of sufferers and the eventual freeing of them to more enlightened ways. Perhaps the most famous is Father Damien, the Belgian priest who ministered to lepers in Hawaii from 1873 to his death from leprosy in 1889. An American Protestant missionary met him there, and wrote a private posthumous letter critical of Father Damien ("He was not a pure man in his relations with women, and the leprosy of which he died should be attributed to his vices and carelessness.") which the recipient published. Damien's cause was taken up by another previous visitor to Molokai, none other than Robert Louis Stevenson. The controversy only swelled interest in the colony and made Damien a martyr and a figurehead for fundraising.
Leper colonies were not only in far away, impoverished places full of people with dark skin. The American version was in a lovely place, if a little swampy, called Carville, Louisiana. Huge oaks, songbirds, and gorgeous flowering trees made it a place of inspiring natural beauty. "It should have been a tonic to the soul. Except that we were fenced in." So wrote Stanley Stein, a Jewish pharmacist from Texas who edited the patients' publication _The Star_. He was the bane of the U.S. Public Health Service, always campaigning in a spirited American fashion for more rights. The campaign worked, as gradually patients were allowed more time on the outside, and the fences that had held them were taken down. Stein became a star himself, touring the country and hobnobbing with the likes of Tallulah Bankhead. He died in 1967, but Carville still exists as does his paper. The facility was formally closed as a leprosarium in 1999, but some with the disease still live there; having been isolated all their lives, they fear trying to live in the outside world, although they could do so with which much less stigma due to Stein's campaign. Gould shows that this has been the pattern in one locale after another as scientific evaluation of leprosy as a disease has shown that it isn't anything more than a disease, and not a very dangerous one at that, especially now. There is a contradiction, though, in that sufferers and healers who insist that it is just a disease are taking away its special status. The special status may have been founded on fear, but take it away and the focus on treatment and rehabilitation may be lost, especially in poor countries with other diseases to fight. It is one of the many paradoxes in an engaging and moving book.
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SIMILAR PRODUCTS |

| Carville: Remembering Leprosy in America by Marcia Gaudet (Author), James Carville (Foreword)
Mysterious and misunderstood, distorted by biblical imagery of disfigurement and uncleanness, Hansen's disease (or leprosy) has all but disappeared from America's consciousness. In Carville, Louisiana, the closed doors of the nation's last center for the treatment of leprosy hold stories of sadness, separation, and even strength in the face of what was once a life-wrenching diagnosis. Drawn from interviews with living patients and extensive research in the leprosarium's archives,...
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| The Colony: The Harrowing True Story of the Exiles of Molokai by John Tayman (Author)
Beginning in 1866 and continuing for over a century, more than eight thousand people suspected of having leprosy were forcibly exiled to the Hawaiian island of Molokai -- the longest and deadliest instance of medical segregation in American history. Torn from their homes and families, these men, women, and children were loaded into shipboard cattle stalls and abandoned in a lawless place where brutality held sway. Many did not have leprosy, and many who did were not contagious, yet all were...
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| Colonizing Leprosy: Imperialism and the Politics of Public Health in the United States (Studies in Social Medicine) by Michelle T. Moran (Author)
By comparing institutions in Hawai'i and Louisiana designed to incarcerate individuals with a highly stigmatized disease, Colonizing Leprosy provides an innovative study of the complex relationship between U.S. imperialism and public health policy in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Focusing on the Kalaupapa Settlement in Moloka'i and the U.S. National Leprosarium in Carville, Michelle Moran shows not only how public health policy emerged as a tool of empire in America's...
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| Triumph at Carville Directed By: John Wilhelm, Sally Squires
Profiles Carville, a former Louisiana antebellum plantation that provided 100 years of service to Hansen's disease (formerly called leprosy) and documents the struggle and eventual success at treating, but not curing, this disease.
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