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Breast Cancer: Society Shapes an Epidemic provides an innovative look at the social and political contexts of breast cancer and examines how this illness has become a social problem. This is not a book about breast cancer as a biological disease, its diagnosis and treatment, or the latest research to cure it. Rather, it looks at how economics, politics, gender, social class, and race-ethnicity have deeply influenced the science behind breast cancer research, spurred the growth of a breast cancer industry, generated media portrayals of women with the disease, and defined and influenced women’s experiences with breast cancer. The contributors address the social construction of breast cancer as an illness and as an area of scientific controversy, advocacy, and public policy. Chapters on the history of breast cancer, the health care system, the environment, and the marketing of breast cancer, among others, tease apart the complex social forces that have shaped our collective and individual responses to breast cancer.
Mapping The Social Landscape is one of the most established and
widely-used readers for Introductory Sociology. The organization
follows that of a typical introductory sociology course and
provides coverage of key concepts including culture, socialization,
deviance, social structure, social inequality, social institutions,
and social change. Susan J. Ferguson selects, edits, and introduces
58 readings representing a plurality of voices and views within
sociology. The selections include classic statements from great
thinkers like C. Wright Mills, Karl Marx, and Max Weber, as well of
the works of contemporary scholars who address current social
issues. Throughout this collection, there are many opportunities to
discuss individual, interactional, and structural levels of
society; the roles of race, ethnicity, class, gender, and sexuality
in shaping social life; and the intersection of statuses and
identities.
Presents 48 articles on the family brought together to meet four
pedagogical roles: to deconstruct the notion of a universal family
over time and across culture; to reflect cutting-edge scholarship
by well-known family scholars; to integrate race-ethnicity, social
class, gender, and sexuality in the
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