Preventive Strikes: Women, Precancer, and Prophylactic Surgery

By Ilana Löwy

Modern scientific tools can identify a genetic predisposition to cancer before any disease is detectable. Some women will never develop breast or ovarian cancer, but they nevertheless must decide, as a result of genetic testing, whether to have their breasts and ovaries removed to avoid the possibility of disease. The striking contrast between the sophistication of diagnosis and the crudeness of preventive surgery forms the basis of historian Ilana Löwy’s important study. Löwy traces the history of prophylactic amputations through a century of preventive treatment and back to a long tradition of surgical management of gynecological problems. In the early twentieth century, surgeons came to believe that removing precancerous lesions – a term difficult to define even today – averted the danger of malignancy. This practice, Löwy finds, later led to surgical interventions for women with a hereditary predisposition to cancer but no detectable disease. Richly detailed stories of patients and surgeons in the United States, France, and the United Kingdom allow Löwy to compare the evolution of medical thought and practice – and personal choice – in these different cultures.

Preventive Strikes aims to improve our understanding of professional, social, and cultural responses to cancer in the twenty-first century and to inform our reflections about how values are incorporated into routine medical practices.

Read the book here.

Masks and myopia – politics and protection in public health campaigns

By Yixue Yang and Sharrona Pearl

This seminar is part of the centre for History in Public Health seminar series: Historical perspectives on ethics, morals, and values in public health. It examines the cultural and political contexts shaping historical public health interventions.

Yang explores the Protecting Students’ Eyesight Campaign in later Mao-era People’s Republic of China -1960-1976), highlighting how health guidelines transformed students’ personal habits and how the instrumentalization of youth was coated in the rhetoric of protection. Pearl discusses the history of masking and its tensions in the US, from the 19th century to Covid, emphasising the dynamics around concealing and revealing, protecting and dividing.  Using a broad historical lens, she explores the history of masking, exploring various sites and domains of practice to show its consistent use as a means of protection and division.

Read more and watch the seminar here.

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