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4. Death, Decay, and the Genesis of Shame
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Jason Szabo
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
- 1. “What Are His Chances, Doctor?” The Semantics of Incurability in the Nineteenth Century 15
- 2. Reinventing Hope in the Late Nineteenth Century 37
- 3. “I Told You So”: The Rhyme and Reason of Chronic Disease 58
- 4. Death, Decay, and the Genesis of Shame 70
- 5. Medical Attitudes toward the Care of Incurables 90
- 6. Medical Strategies, Social Conventions, and Palliative Medicine 113
- 7. Ecce Homo: Opiates, Suffering, and the Art of Palliation 136
- 8. The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Incurability and the Quest for Goodness 159
- 9. The Fate of the Incurably Ill between the Two Revolutions, 1789–1848 175
- 10. Caught between Initiative and Inertia: Responses to the Incurably Ill from 1845 to 1905 197
- Conclusion 216
- Notes 223
- Select Bibliography 277
- Index 289
- ABOUT THE AUTHOR 297
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction 1
- 1. “What Are His Chances, Doctor?” The Semantics of Incurability in the Nineteenth Century 15
- 2. Reinventing Hope in the Late Nineteenth Century 37
- 3. “I Told You So”: The Rhyme and Reason of Chronic Disease 58
- 4. Death, Decay, and the Genesis of Shame 70
- 5. Medical Attitudes toward the Care of Incurables 90
- 6. Medical Strategies, Social Conventions, and Palliative Medicine 113
- 7. Ecce Homo: Opiates, Suffering, and the Art of Palliation 136
- 8. The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Incurability and the Quest for Goodness 159
- 9. The Fate of the Incurably Ill between the Two Revolutions, 1789–1848 175
- 10. Caught between Initiative and Inertia: Responses to the Incurably Ill from 1845 to 1905 197
- Conclusion 216
- Notes 223
- Select Bibliography 277
- Index 289
- ABOUT THE AUTHOR 297