Medicine and the Body

Front Cover
SAGE, Mar 19, 2003 - Social Science - 264 pages
`An intelligent and informed account of medical sociology. Simon Williams has produced an original and comprehensive sociological statement of the centrality of the body to an understanding of medicine, health and illness. His scope is impressive... It will shape future teaching and research in the field of health and illness′ - Bryan S Turner, Professor of Sociology, University of Cambridge

This is a clear, well-written account of medicine, health and the body. Taking recent debates on the body and society as its point of departure, the book critically reexamines a series of embodied issues and emotional agendas in health and illness. Included here are cutting edge discussions and debates concerning:

- the medicalized body

- health inequalities

- childhood and ageing

- the dilemmas of high-tech medicine

- chronic illness and disability

- caring and (bio)ethics

- sleep, death and dying

- the body in late/postmodernity

Written in an accessible, engaging style, with many original and innovative insights, the book will appeal to undergraduate and postgraduate students alike, and to researchers and lecturers with an interest in the embodied agendas of health and medicine in the new millennium.

 

Contents

Medical Sociology in the New Millennium
1
Reductionism Constructionism and Beyond
9
Chapter 2 What Is Health? Thinking through the Boundaries of the Body
29
Emotions Inequalities and Health
44
Bodies Across the Lifecourse
69
Chronic Illness as Biographical Disruption?
95
Sleep Death and Dying in LatePostmodernity
112
Where Do We Draw the Line?
139
From Corporeality to Hyperreality?
154
Chapter 9 Caring BodiesEmbodied Ethics
180
The Challenges Ahead
211
References
216
Index
243
Copyright

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About the author (2003)

Simon Williams is Senior Lecturer in the Dept. of Sociology, University of Warwick

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