A woman's disease: the history of cervical cancer

"Cervical cancer is an emotive disease with multiple connotations. It has stood for the horror of cancer, the curse of femininity, the hope of cutting-edge medical technologies and the promise of screening for malignant tumours. For a long time, this disease was identified with the most dreaded...

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Main Author: Löwy, Ilana
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: New York 2011
Oxford University Press
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19104207124919224899-a-woman-s-disease-the-history-.htm
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author Löwy, Ilana
author_facet Löwy, Ilana
collection Library items
description "Cervical cancer is an emotive disease with multiple connotations. It has stood for the horror of cancer, the curse of femininity, the hope of cutting-edge medical technologies and the promise of screening for malignant tumours. For a long time, this disease was identified with the most dreaded aspects of malignancies: prolonged invalidity and chronic pain, but also physical degradation, shame and social isolation. Cervical cancer displayed in parallel the dangers of being a woman. In the 20th century, innovations initially developed to control cervical cancer - radiotherapy and radium therapy, exfoliate cytology (Pap smear), homogenisation of the 'staging' of tumours, mass campaigns for an early detection of precancerous lesions of the cervix - set standards for diagnosis, treatment and prevention of other malignancies. In the late 20th century, cervical cancer underwent another important change. With the display of the role of selected strands of HPV (Human Papilloma Virus) in the genesis of this malignancy, it was transformed into a sexually transmitted disease. This new understanding of cervical cancer linked it more firmly with lifestyle choices, and thus increased the danger of stigmatisation of patients; on the other hand it opened the possibility for efficient prevention of this malignancy through vaccination. Ilana Lowy follows the disease from antiquity to the 21st century, focussing on the period since the mid-19th century, during which cervical cancer was dissociated from other gynaecological disorders and became a distinct entity. Following the ways in which new developments in science, medicine, and society have affected beliefs about medical progress and an individual's responsibility, gender roles, reproduction, and sex, Lowy demonstrates our understanding of what cervical cancer is, and how it can be prevented and cured."
format TEXT
id 19104207124919224899_bc740550cefb4b0993ffc02eb38f0a3e
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 19104207124919224899_bc740550cefb4b0993ffc02eb38f0a3e
is_hierarchy_title A woman's disease: the history of cervical cancer
language English
physical 220 p.
Paper
publishDate 2011
publisher New York
Oxford University Press
spellingShingle Löwy, Ilana
cancer
gender
history
medicine
social aspect
uterine cancer
women
A woman's disease: the history of cervical cancer
title A woman's disease: the history of cervical cancer
topic cancer
gender
history
medicine
social aspect
uterine cancer
women
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19104207124919224899-a-woman-s-disease-the-history-.htm