About the Author:
Stephen J. Kunitz is at University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry.
Review:
"Diseases and Social Diversity stands as a well-researched reminder that diseases are manifestations of multiple variables that are often rooted in particular cultures as well as in particular social and ecological settings. Stephen Kunitz should be commended for calling our attention, once
again, to this fundamental lesson surrounding the treatment and prevention of diseases."--Medical Anthropology Quarterly
Disease and Social Diversity is the harvest of wide experience in medical practice, acute intelligence, and deep research and reading in the social and natural sciences....Kunitz compels us to broaden our vision beyond the natural history of infections to individual (and perhaps collective)
patient careers....This important book bristles with arresting observations which serve as persuasive arguments for blending biomedical and `social' perceptions. It should be required reading for policy-makers, and social scientists will find it disconcerting and liberating." --Donald Denoon,
Australian National University, Health Transition Review
"This is an important book because it brings indigenous people into the debate about colonialism, imperialism and historiography. In this regard Kunitz opts for a perspective from which indigenous people are seen as more self-contained than in other models or previous sociological accounts. He
attempts to explain, through the examples of health, what happened to indigenous people as Europeans came to dominate their worlds; and he rejects large models which, he argues, fail to account in a standardized way for the differences in culture and geography that safeguarded populations against
epidemics and decline....This should provide for lively exchanges between scholars who, in the Kuhnian sense, maintain them as the accepted paradigm (Kuhn 1970). The book has scholarly footnotes, appendices and an index; it would be ideal as a university text for students studying history,
anthropology, demography or epidemiology." --Gordon Briscoe, Australian National University, Health Transition Review
"A book we have needed for some time....We desperately need two new elements in this field: one, scholars who are not running for office in some imperialist or anti-imperialist Valhalla; and second, some hard data. Stephen Kunitz is an example of said scholars and he provides pages of
data....Kunitz is a bit of a closet humanist, for all his statistics and charts..."--Alfred W. Crosby, University of Texas at Austin, Population and Development Review
As archaeologists, anthropologists, and others increasingly turn away from the idea that contact between Europeans and non-Europeans in the Americas and Oceania uniformly resulted in catastrophic population collapses following the introduction of new European diseases among the latter
groups...they would do well to consider the views and persuasive arguments regarding disease and social diversity put forth by Kunitz in this book." --Texas Archeological Society (Book Notes)
"In this scholarly and carefully referenced book Kunitz examines the effects of colonization in North America, Australia, and Polynesia." --British Medical Journal
"His book is undoubtedly a valuable contribution to the historiography of medicine and colonization." -- Bulletin of the History of Medicine
"This is a remarkable and wide-ranging book with important messages for policy makers as well as executors, not to mention historians and epidemiologists. It should also prove an important book for the peoples it studies who might wish to have an informed account of what has happened to them
demographically and why."--Journal of the History of Medicine
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