ABSTRACT

From the castigation and stigmatization of victims of AIDS to our celebration of diet, exercise and fitness, the moral categorization of health and disease reflects contemporary notions that disease results from moral failure and that health is the representation of moral triumph. Ranging across academic disciplines and historical time periods, the essays in Morality and Health offer a compelling assessment of the powerful role of moral systems for judging the complex questions of risk and responsibility for disease, the experience of illness, and social and cultural responses to those who are sick. Contributors include Keith Thomas, Charles Rosenberg, Richard Shweder, Arthur Kleinman, David Mechanic, Nancy Tomes and Linda Gordon.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

part I|86 pages

Perspectives on Morality and Health

chapter 2|17 pages

Banishing Risk

Continuity and Change in the Moral Management of Disease

chapter 3|25 pages

Behavior, Disease, and Health in the Twentieth-Century United States

The Moral Valence of Individual Risk

part III|124 pages

Morality and Behavior in Historical Context

chapter 7|12 pages

Sugar and Morality

chapter 8|15 pages

Food, Morality, and Social Reform

chapter 9|29 pages

The Culture of Public Problems

Drinking-Driving and the Symbolic Order

chapter 11|20 pages

Teenage Pregnancy and out-of-Wedlock Birth

Morals, Moralism, Experts

chapter 12|24 pages

Moralizing the Microbe

The Germ Theory and the Moral Construction of Behavior in the Late-Nineteenth-Century Antituberculosis Movement

part IV|107 pages

Contemporary Perspectives on Morality and Health

chapter 13|34 pages

Secular Morality

chapter 14|27 pages

The Legal Regulation of Smoking (and Smokers)

Public Health or Secular Morality?

chapter 16|23 pages

Moralization