TY - BOOK
T1 - Cancer Patients, Cancer Pathways
T2 - Historical and Sociological Perspectives
A2 - Timmermann, Carsten
A2 - Toon, Elizabeth
PY - 2012/10/10
Y1 - 2012/10/10
N2 - The eleven essays in this volume examine cancer research and treatment as everyday practice in post-war Europe and North America. Rather than writing cancer's history as that of inevitable progress and obstacles overcome, these scholars emphasize how contingency, politics, and institutional interests have informed approaches to research and treatment. Focusing on the interface between individual patient trajectories and the evolving routines of research, therapy and care, the contributors bring together ethnographically-inflected historical and sociological observation with technically well-informed accounts of encounters between patients and professionals. The picture that emerges is one of cancers rather than Cancer, of patients rather than 'The Patient', and of medical practices that are both experimental and routine. As cancer treatment has come to epitomize biomedicine, these essays speak to readers interested more broadly in understanding patients' experiences with large institutions, sophisticated technologies, and clinical research, and the way these experiences can shape treatment policies.
AB - The eleven essays in this volume examine cancer research and treatment as everyday practice in post-war Europe and North America. Rather than writing cancer's history as that of inevitable progress and obstacles overcome, these scholars emphasize how contingency, politics, and institutional interests have informed approaches to research and treatment. Focusing on the interface between individual patient trajectories and the evolving routines of research, therapy and care, the contributors bring together ethnographically-inflected historical and sociological observation with technically well-informed accounts of encounters between patients and professionals. The picture that emerges is one of cancers rather than Cancer, of patients rather than 'The Patient', and of medical practices that are both experimental and routine. As cancer treatment has come to epitomize biomedicine, these essays speak to readers interested more broadly in understanding patients' experiences with large institutions, sophisticated technologies, and clinical research, and the way these experiences can shape treatment policies.
KW - History of Medicine
KW - Medical Sociology
KW - History of Cancer
U2 - 10.1057/9781137272089
DO - 10.1057/9781137272089
M3 - Anthology
SN - 9781137272072
SN - 9781349444809
T3 - Science, Technology and Medicine in Modern History
BT - Cancer Patients, Cancer Pathways
PB - Palgrave Macmillan Ltd
CY - Basingstoke
ER -