AIDS |
Acknowledgments |
Introduction: AIDS, Public Policy, and Historical Inquiry |
Disease and Social Order in America: Perceptions and Expectations |
• | Men of Goodwill |
• | Evolving Conceptions of Disease |
• | Disease as Behavioral Sanction |
• | Contradictions and Crisis |
• | Conclusion: The Social Construction of AIDS |
• | Notes |
Epidemics and History: Ecological Perspectives and Social Responses |
• | Plague |
• | Cholera |
• | Polio |
• | Conclusion |
• | Notes |
Quarantine and the Problem of AIDS |
• | Leprosy |
• | Yellow Fever |
• | Cholera |
• | Tuberculosis |
• | Quarantine and the "Disease" of Immigration |
• | Drugs and Feared Minorities |
• | Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome |
• | Notes |
The Politics of Physicians' Responsibility in Epidemics: A Note on History |
• | Negotiation and Opportunity |
• | Epidemics in the United States |
• | Institutionalizing Plague Doctors |
• | Physicians' Contemporary Obligations |
• | Notes |
The Enforcement of Health: The British Debate |
• | The Individual and the State |
• | State Intervention, Paternalism, and Resistance |
• | Medical Power, Privacy, and AIDS |
• | Notes |
Sin versus Science: Venereal Disease in Twentieth-Century Baltimore |
• | Treatment for Venereal Disease: The Public Health Clinics |
• | Venereal Disease and Racism |
• | Syphilis Becomes Everyone's Disease: The National Campaign |
• | Medical Treatment or Crusade against Vice? |
• | The Impact of War |
• | Sex Education During the War |
• | After the War: The New Penicillin Therapy |
• | Conclusion: The End of the Struggle? |
• | Notes |
AIDS: From Social History to Social Policy |
• | Sexually Transmitted Diseases in Historical Context |
• | The AIDS Epidemic |
• | Social Attitudes and Stigma |
• | Screening for HIV |
• | AIDS and Public Health |
• | AIDS in a Cultural Context |
• | Notes |
Images of Plague: Infectious Disease in the Visual Arts |
• | Plates |
• | Notes |
AIDS, Gender, and Biomedical Discourse: Current Contests for Meaning |
• | Introduction: AIDS and the Challenge to Semantic Imperialism |
• | The Evolving Body of the Gendered "AIDS Patient" in Biomedical Discourse |
• | Rock Hudson and the Crisis in Gender |
• | AIDS Goes Heterosexual |
• | Women and AIDS: Toward a Feminist Analysis |
• | Notes |
In the Eye of the Storm: The Epidemiological Construction of AIDS |
• | Epidemiology and Public Health |
• | Case-Finding and Surveillance |
• | The "Life-Style" Hypothesis: Experimental Work |
• | An Unknown Transmissible Agent |
• | AIDS: "The Story of a Virus" |
• | Conclusion |
• | Notes |
Legitimation through Disaster: AIDS and the Gay Movement |
• | The Problems of Prevention: Public Health Versus Discrimination |
• | AIDS and Gay Rights: Progress or Reversal? |
• | The Consequences of Cooperation between Gay Organizations and the State |
• | National Differences |
• | New Perceptions of Homosexuality |
• | Notes |
AIDS and the American Health Polity: The History and Prospects of a Crisis of Authority |
The Health Polity in 1981 |
• | The Declining Importance of Infectious Disease |
• | Increasing Priority of Chronic Degenerative Disease |
• | Individual Responsibility for Health |
• | The Unfulfilled Promise of Science |
• | From Comprehensive Services to Cost Control |
• | The Crisis of Authority |
The Health Polity Responds to AIDS |
The Modern Response to Epidemic Disease |
• | Surveillance |
• | Research |
• | Cost of Treatment |
• | Patient Services |
AIDS and the Future of the Health Polity |
• | A Polemical Interpretation of Recent History |
• | The Persistence of the Unexpected |
• | The Limits of Individual Responsibility |
• | The Reassertion of Central Authority |
• | Notes |
Notes on Contributors |
Index |
• | A |
• | B |
• | C |
• | D |
• | E |
• | F |
• | G |
• | H |
• | I |
• | J |
• | K |
• | L |
• | M |
• | N |
• | O |
• | P |
• | Q |
• | R |
• | S |
• | T |
• | U |
• | V |
• | W |
• | X |
• | Y |