Pox: An American History

Pox: An American History

by Michael Willrich
Pox: An American History

Pox: An American History

by Michael Willrich

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Overview

The untold story of how America's progressive-era war on smallpox sparked one of the great civil liberties battles of the twentieth century.

At the turn of the last century, a smallpox epidemic swept the United States from coast to coast. In this gripping account, award- winning historian Michael Willrich chronicles the government's fight against the outbreak and the ensuing clash of modern medicine, civil liberties, and state power. Pox introduces readers to memorable characters on both sides of the debate-from the doctors and club- wielding police charged with enforcing the law to vaccinate every citizen to the anti-vaccinationists, who stood up for their individual freedoms but were often dismissed as misguided cranks. Riveting and thoroughly researched, Pox delivers a masterful examination of progressive-era history that resonates powerfully today.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780143120780
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Publication date: 03/27/2012
Series: Penguin History of American Life Series
Pages: 432
Sales rank: 704,942
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.30(h) x 1.10(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Michael Willrich is the award-winning author of City of Courts. He is an associate professor of history at Brandeis University and a former journalist who wrote for The Washington Monthly, City Paper, The New Republic, and other magazines. He lives in Wellesley, Massachusetts.

What People are Saying About This

Charles Rosenberg

"Pox is a scholarly rarity: an important and deeply-researched book that speaks not only to historians, but to any thoughtful reader. Michael Willrich has rescued and elegantly re-created a neglected episode in American history. In clear yet nuanced prose, he has made a lasting contribution to our understanding of the complex and tangled relationship between the powers and responsibilities of the state and the autonomy of individual men and women."--(Charles Rosenberg, author of The Cholera Years)

David Hackett Fischer

"In one of American history's ironies, a nation fiercely supportive of individual liberty also developed a public health movement that may have become the most violently invasive of individual rights in the world. These tendencies collided at the turn of the 20th century, when a smallpox epidemic spread through much of the country. Michael Willrich tells the story of Americans who fought for liberty from vaccination while others were vaccinated by brutal force at the hands of New York Police, Texas Rangers, and even the U.S. Cavalry. A torrent of litigation followed, some of it carefully balanced, much of it very unwise, and it still reverberates in American jurisprudence. These were hard cases, but in the highly skilled hands of Michael Willrich, hard cases make great history. We all have much to learn from this excellent book."--(David Hackett Fischer, author of Champlain's Dream and Washington's Crossing)

Michael J. Klarman

"Michael Willrich has written a fascinating, fast-paced story of America's last major smallpox epidemic. Pox is a tale of race, class, violence, political resistance, intergovernmental conflict, and, most importantly, the age-old tension between individual rights and government regulation for the common good. Writing with passion and verve, Willrich weaves riveting anecdotes and vivid portraits of previously unknown players into a compelling historical narrative with resonance for today's debate over the constitutionality of federal health care reform. This is history at its best written by a master of his craft."--(Michael J. Klarman, author of From Jim Crow to Civil Rights)

Hampton Sides

"In Pox, Michael Willrich melds meticulous research with elegant writing to create a richly-textured social history about a horrible disease at the charged intersection of science, politics, race, and culture. Willrich deftly traces the great clashes between government epidemiologists and civil libertarians at an uneasy time when a burgeoning American Empire was field-testing the public consequences of germ theory. After reading Pox, you'll never think the same way again about the now all-but-mechanical ritual of rolling up your shirtsleeve for a vaccine needle."--(Hampton Sides, author of Hellhound on His Trail)

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