Historiography has paid less attention to cancer than to other diseases. This is probably because its emergence as a major social problem is relatively recent, compared to other diseases that have devastated humanity for centuries. In the last two decades, studies on the cancer from a historical perspective have been increasing. However, this has not been the case in Spain. This volume attempts to remedy this deficiency by studying various aspects that allow us to outline how cancer became a social problem in Spain throughout the 20th century. The chapters explore various aspects. Some of them are cross-cutting and appear in all case studies. One of them is the preponderance of the biomedical approach when conceiving the disease. Another, of great importance, is the constant presence of charitable and philanthropic initiatives at both the local and national levels. Despite some programmatic statements, public healthcare, with all the peculiarities of its development during General Franco’s dictatorship, did not deal with the disease in a specific manner prior to the 1970s. The institutions that were created to deal with the problem were, in most cases, driven by charitable impulses, with the support of local entities. The importance of early diagnosis and the responsibility of the population in this regard, a kind of self-monitoring, is another constant. In addition, the treatment of cancer transformed the way healthcare was conceived with the emergence of new, increasingly sophisticated therapeutic options, with a strong presence of technoscience, around which new specialities were developed. Finally, some chapters also deal with representations of the disease. The authors come from diverse academic traditions, which enriches the approaches used and allows for the use of varied sources.
págs. 7-17
Welfare monarchy, diplomacy and science in the transnational fight against cancer: The spanish league against cancer (1924-1931)
Eduardo Bueno Vergara, Berta Echániz Martínez, Enrique Perdiguero Gil
págs. 21-37
About priorities, blames, and scientific controversies: The generation of knowledge about the nature of cancer in spain (1940-1950)
págs. 39-57
págs. 59-77
From cancerology to medical oncology: An oral history of the institutionalisation of a discipline
págs. 79-99
Radium: Medical market and the response of local authorities in the city of Valencia (Spain) in the first half of the twntieth century
págs. 103-125
Facing cancer in Franco’s Spain: The AECC and the Regional Cancer centre in Seville
págs. 127-144
Catalan oncology: From fear and taboo to the discourse of hope (1896-1986)
págs. 145-164
Atoms for health: The cobalt bomb and cancer in mid20th-century Barcelona
págs. 165-185
Cancer as a political discursive tool in the early francoist press: Pathological metaphors and their impact on the social perception of the disease
págs. 189-201
págs. 203-225
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