It’s typical. You wait several millennia for a biography of a common disease and then four come along at once.
And yet, like the line of proverbial buses, there is a certain inevitability about the Biographies of Diseases series, which the Oxford University Press has just launched with its first four volumes—on hysteria, cholera, diabetes, and asthma—with up to 20 more books in the pipeline. After all, we have been regaled in recent years with the biography of a city (London), a continent (Africa), and even a fish (cod), so the idea of biographies of illness was plainly an irresistible marketing attraction.
But does the format work? Pedants may argue that a biography of cholera, for example, is simply the repackaging of a well worn history of the disease with a fashionable new title. Yet the notion of an ailment having a birth, a lifespan, and—ideally—a demise, set in the context of changing social and medical attitudes, and viewed through the lens of its often human-like impulse for survival, shifting moods, and idiosyncratic traits (albeit usually …
Sign in
Personal subscribers, sign in here:
Article access
Article access for 1 day
Purchase this article for £20 $30 €32*
The PDF version can be downloaded as your personal record
CiteULike
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
Reddit
Technorati
Twitter
Stumbleupon
Rapid responses
Latest Responses
Ethical considerations
Published 14 February 2012
Re: Diagnosis and management of Raynaud’s phenomenon
Published 14 February 2012
Re: Raised inflammatory markers
Published 14 February 2012
Re: Physical activity for cancer survivors: meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials
Published 14 February 2012
Smokefree cars in Wales: Laws are better
Published 14 February 2012
Most responses
Does anyone understand the government’s plan for the NHS? (17 responses)
Published 17 Jan 2012
Bad medicine: medical nutrition (15 responses)
Published 18 Jan 2012
Shared decision making: really putting patients at the centre of healthcare (8 responses)
Published 27 Jan 2012
Why legislation is necessary for my health reforms (8 responses)
Published 1 Feb 2012
How much of a social media profile can doctors have? (7 responses)
Published 23 Jan 2012