It was not long ago that scientists proclaimed victory over polio, the dread disease of the 1950s. More recently polio resurfaced, not conquered at all, spreading across the countries of Africa. As we once again face the specter of this disease, along with other killers like AIDS and SARS, this powerful book reminds us of the personal cost, the cultural implications, and the historical significance of one of modern humanity's deadliest biological enemies. In Polio and Its Aftermath Marc Shell, himself a victim of polio, offers an inspired analysis of the disease. Part memoir, part cultural criticism and history, part meditation on the meaning of disease, Shell's work combines the understanding of a medical researcher with the sensitivity of a literary critic. He deftly draws a detailed yet broad picture of the lived experience of a crippling disease as it makes it way into every facet of human existence. Polio and Its Aftermath conveys the widespread panic that struck as the disease swept the world in the mid-fifties. It captures an atmosphere in which polio vied with the Cold War as the greatest cause of unrest in North America--and in which a strange and often debilitating uncertainty was one of the disease's salient but least treatable symptoms. Polio particularly afflicted the young, and Shell explores what this meant to families and communities. And he reveals why, in spite of the worldwide relief that greeted Jonas Salk's vaccine as a miracle of modern science, we have much more to fear from polio now than we know. (20050314)
Author(s): Marc Shell
Edition: 1
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Year: 2005
Language: English
Pages: 335
Contents......Page 8
Prologue......Page 12
Autobiographies of a Disease......Page 36
One Polio Story......Page 38
In the Family......Page 68
A Polio School......Page 103
Stasis and Kinesis......Page 138
Paralytic Polio and Moving Pictures......Page 140
Handi-Capitalism and Cinema Business......Page 150
The Cast of Rear Window; or, Cinema and Akinesia......Page 161
Politics......Page 190
Polio and the Great Wars......Page 192
Remembering Roosevelt......Page 201
What We Can Learn, If We Hurry......Page 215
Aftermath......Page 238
Notes......Page 242
Acknowledgments......Page 308
Text Credits......Page 310
Illustration Credits......Page 314
List of Boxes......Page 318
Name Index......Page 320
Subject Index......Page 324