Cancer in the twentieth century / edited by David Cantor.

Date:
2008
  • Books

About this work

Publication/Creation

Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008.

Physical description

vi, 350 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm

Bibliographic information

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Contents

Uncertain enthusiasm: the American Cancer Society, public education, and the problems of the movie, 1921-1960 / David Cantor -- "For Jimmy and the boys and girls of America": publicizing childhood cancers in twentieth-century America / Gretchen Krueger -- Dark victory: cancer and popular Hollywood film / Susan E. Lederer -- "Cancer as the general population knows It": knowledge, fear, and lay education in 1950s Britain / Elizabeth Toon -- The "ineffable freemasonry of sex": feminist surgeons and the establishment of radiotherapy in early twentieth-century Britain / Ornella Moscucci -- Contested cumulations: configurations of cancer treatments through the twentieth century / John V. Pickstone -- Cancer clinical trials: the emergence and development of a new style of practice / Peter Keating, Alberto Cambrosio -- Ill patient, public activist: Rose Kushner's attack on breast cancer chemotherapy / Barron H. Lerner -- Breast cancer and the "materiality of risk": the rise of morphological prediction / Ilana Lōwy -- From cancer families to HNPCC: Henry Lynch and the transformations of hereditary cancer, 1975-1999 / Raul Necochea -- Medicine and the public: the 1962 report of the Royal College of Physicians and the new public health / Virginia Berridge -- As depressing as it was predictable? Lung cancer, clinical trials, and the Medical Research Council in postwar Britain / Carsten Timmermann.

Languages

Where to find it

  • LocationStatus
    History of Medicine
    GM.AA9
    Open shelves

Permanent link

Identifiers

ISBN

  • 9780801888670
  • 0801888670