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The History of Cancer and Emotions in Twentieth-Century Germany: Emotions in History

Autor Bettina Hitzer Traducere de Adam Bresnahan
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 iun 2022
Different people feel different emotions when they are diagnosed with cancer. Both today and a century ago, fear and hope, shame and disgust, sadness and joy are and were the emotions experienced by many cancer patients and their loved ones. But these emotions do not just have significance for the people who feel them. They have also exerted a surprisingly profound influence on how hospitals and laboratories dealt with cancer, how early detection campaigns portrayed it, and how doctors talked about it with their patients. Bettina Hitzer details the history of cancer and emotions in twentieth-century Germany and thus follows the cancer-associated transformations of emotional regimes, emotional politics, and emotional experiences through five different political systems. In doing so, the study underscores that political caesuras resonate in the immediate corporeality of the history of emotions.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780192868077
ISBN-10: 0192868071
Pagini: 416
Ilustrații: 31 black and white figures/illustrations
Dimensiuni: 165 x 240 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.78 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Emotions in History

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Recenzii

Hitzer's well produced and richly illustrated book is a welcome addition to the growing literature on the history of cancer, which has so far been dominated by studies of developments in the UK and North America. The book engages very productively with the existing historiography, and the approach focused on the history of emotions works extremely well.

Notă biografică

Bettina Hitzer is Heisenberg Fellow at the Hannah Arendt Institute for Totalitarianism Studies at the Technical University Dresden as well as Privatdozentin at Freie Universität Berlin, Germany. From 2014-2020, she was Leader of the Minerva Research Group 'Emotions and Illness: Histories of an Intricate Relation' at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin. She was awarded the 2020 Leipzig Book Fair Prize for her most recent book, Krebs fühlen (2020) and in 2016 the Walter-de-Gruyter Award of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities. She is the author or (co-)editor of ten books, most recently Feeling Disease in Modern History: Experiencing Medicine and Illness (with Rob Boddice; forthcoming) and In unsere Mitte genommen: Adoption im 20. Jahrhundert (with Benedikt Stuchtey; forthcoming). Currently, she is working on a research project about the post-1945 history of adoption in East and West Germany.