Infectious Fear: Politics, Disease, and the Health Effects of Segregation

Infectious Fear: Politics, Disease, and the Health Effects of Segregation

by Samuel Kelton Roberts
Infectious Fear: Politics, Disease, and the Health Effects of Segregation

Infectious Fear: Politics, Disease, and the Health Effects of Segregation

by Samuel Kelton Roberts

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Overview

For most of the first half of the twentieth century, tuberculosis ranked among the top three causes of mortality among urban African Americans. Often afflicting an entire family or large segments of a neighborhood, the plague of TB was as mysterious as it was fatal. Samuel Kelton Roberts Jr. examines how individuals and institutions--black and white, public and private--responded to the challenges of tuberculosis in a segregated society.

Reactionary white politicians and health officials promoted "racial hygiene" and sought to control TB through Jim Crow quarantines, Roberts explains. African Americans, in turn, protested the segregated, overcrowded housing that was the true root of the tuberculosis problem. Moderate white and black political leadership reconfigured definitions of health and citizenship, extending some rights while constraining others. Meanwhile, those who suffered with the disease--as its victims or as family and neighbors--made the daily adjustments required by the devastating effects of the "white plague."

Exploring the politics of race, reform, and public health, Infectious Fear uses the tuberculosis crisis to illuminate the limits of racialized medicine and the roots of modern health disparities. Ultimately, it reveals a disturbing picture of the United States' health history while offering a vision of a more democratic future.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807894071
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 04/30/2009
Series: Studies in Social Medicine
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 328
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Samuel Kelton Roberts Jr. is associate professor of history at Columbia University and assistant professor of sociomedical sciences at Columbia's Mailman School of Public Health.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

A powerful, thoughtful, and incisive work that constitutes a major historiographical intervention, Infectious Fear is a skillful accounting of the racialized politics of public health.—Michele Mitchell, author of Righteous Propagation: African Americans and the Politics of Racial Destiny after Reconstruction



This deeply researched book lays bare the irrefutable causal connection between Jim Crow-mandated racial residential segregation and high death rates from tuberculosis among African Americans in the so-called New South of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Infectious Fear raises the bar for scholarship in historical epidemiology.—Sherman A. James, Duke University

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