Showing posts with label plagues and epidemics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plagues and epidemics. Show all posts

Infectious Ideas: U.S. Political Responses to the AIDS Crisis Review

Infectious Ideas: U.S. Political Responses to the AIDS Crisis
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Growing up hearing about AIDS on the nightly news, my generation missed out on the sexual freedom which my parents had experienced.
But we have a different language to utilize and a different environment to utilize it in as a response from this development.
Initially and mistakenly identified as GRID (Gay Related Immune Deficiency), AIDS now permeates every demographic group in society.
A profound strength of this book is that it examines the response to the virus from an intersecting sociological perspective. Almost as if from learning from the mistakes of the response to the virus itself, the voices of women and people of color are thoroughly intertwined throughout the text. AIDS is not merely a white man's disease.
And she includes some interesting pieces of political information along for the ride. Due to my young age, I had not paid close attention to politics when Reagan was in office. I now know he was extreme, but I was honestly shocked to realize that he had people like Gary Bauer (perhaps best known for involvement with the Family Research Council) serving in his White House administration--and in social policy positions.
Such an environment probably stalled the government's effective response to the emergent AIDS crisis. It did not actively address AIDS when the disease was percieved as something which would only strike a certain segment of the population--and one which the conservative administration did not care for.
I have great respect for former Surgeon General Koop. He was able to accomplish the work he did in such a trying work environment. Fear had placed presence over science in many a case. But he pressed on, undaunted and convinced that effective and practical education about AIDS needed priority.


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The Barbary Plague: The Black Death in Victorian San Francisco Review

The Barbary Plague: The Black Death in Victorian San Francisco
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Plague is a fascinating subject because it is so utterly awful and so feared. Marilyn Chase's book not only explains this ancient (and current) disease, it is also a social history of San Francisco at the turn of the century. The disease first struck working-poor Chinese, and the rich white establishment wrongly figured they could stamp it out by being wretched to this minority population. When that didn't work, they denied that plague existed and impugned the public health doctor who kept insisting that it did.
Chase shows the official conspiracy--including the city's press--that not only kept information from the public but actively lied to San Franciscans. Ultimately, she shows that the battle to rid San Francisco of plague was won by persistence, diplomacy and sharing the nitty-gritty facts with the public.
Those who think the plague is a disease of the past, or at least of the Third World, might be interested to read the epilogue. It shows that plague is carried by rodents of the American West, and contains an account of a plague case in New Mexico in 2000.

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