AIDS, Rhetoric, and Medical Knowledge
This 2005 book examines the formation of scientific knowledge about the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s and shows the broader cultural assumptions which grounded this knowledge. Alex Preda highlights the metaphors, narratives, and classifications which framed scientific hypotheses about the nature of the infectious agent and its transmission ways and compares these arguments with those used in the scientific knowledge about SARS. Through detailed rhetorical analysis of biomedical publications, the author shows how knowledge about epidemics is shaped by cultural narratives and categories of social thought. Preda situates his analysis in the broader frame of the world risk society, where scientific knowledge is called upon to support and shape public policies about prevention and health maintenance, among others. But can these policies avoid the influence of cultural narratives and of social classifications? The book shows how culture matters for prevention and health policies, as well as with respect to how scientific research is organized and funded.
- First book to examine the cultural assumptions at the core of scientific knowledge about AIDS
- Compares scientific knowledge about AIDS with scientific knowledge about SARS
- Discusses the consequences of rhetoric for 'expert democracy' and policy-making
Product details
May 2005Adobe eBook Reader
9780511078934
0 pages
0kg
3 b/w illus. 2 tables
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Introduction: AIDS and scientific knowledge
- 1. Making up the rules of seeing: opportunistic infections and the new syndrome
- 2. The economy of risk categories
- 3. The etiologic agent and the rhetoric of scientific debate
- 4. Retrovirus vs. Retrovirus: the arguments for HTLV-III, LAV, and HIV
- 5. The spatial configurations of 'AIDS Risk'
- 6. Who is how much? from qualities to quantities of risk
- 7. In lieu of a conclusion: do rhetorical practices matter?
- References
- Notes.