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Bathsheba's Breast: Women, Cancer, and History »

Book cover image of Bathsheba's Breast: Women, Cancer, and History by James S. Olson

Authors: James S. Olson
ISBN-13: 9780801869365, ISBN-10: 0801869366
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Date Published: May 2002
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: James S. Olson

James S. Olson is Distinguished Professor and Chair of the history department at Sam Houston State University. He is co-author (with Randy Roberts) of both Winning Is the Only Thing: Sports in America since 1945, available from Johns Hopkins, and John Wayne: American.

Book Synopsis

The stories of women throughout the ages who have confronted breast cancer, from ancient times to the present.
In 1967, an Italian surgeon touring Amsterdam's Rijksmuseum stopped in front of Rembrandt's Bathsheba at the Well, on loan from the Louvre, and noticed an asymmetry to Bathsheba's left breast; it seemed distended, swollen near the armpit, discolored, and marked with a distinctive pitting. With a little research, the physician learned that Rembrandt's model, his mistress Hendrickje Stoffels, later died after a long illness, and he conjectured in a celebrated article for an Italian medical journal that the cause of her death was almost certainly breast cancer.
A horror known to every culture in every age, breast cancer has been responsible for the deaths of 25 million women throughout history. An Egyptian physician writing 3,500 years ago concluded that there was no treatment for the disease. Later surgeons recommended excising the tumor or, in extreme cases, the entire breast. This was the treatment advocated by the court physician to sixth-century Byzantine empress Theodora, the wife of Justinian, though she chose to die in pain rather than lose her breast. Only in the past few decades has treatment advanced beyond disfiguring surgery.
In Bathsheba's Breast, historian James S. Olson—who lost his left hand and forearm to cancer while writing this book—provides an absorbing and often frightening narrative history of breast cancer told through the heroic stories of women who have confronted the disease, from Theodora to Anne of Austria, Louis XIV's mother, who confronted "nun's disease" by perfecting the art of dying well, to Dr. Jerri Nielson, who was dramatically evacuated from the South Pole in 1999 after performing a biopsy on her own breast and self-administering chemotherapy. Olson explores every facet of the disease: medicine's evolving understanding of its pathology and treatment options; its cultural significance; the political and economic logic that has dictated the terms of a war on a "woman's disease"; and the rise of patient activism. Olson concludes that, although it has not yet been conquered, breast cancer is no longer the story of individual women struggling alone against a mysterious and deadly foe.

Author Biography: James S. Olson is Distinguished Professor and Chair of the history department at Sam Houston State University. He is co-author (with Randy Roberts) of both Winning Is the Only Thing: Sports in America since 1945, available from Johns Hopkins, and John Wayne: American.

The Los Angeles Times

Bathsheba's Breast is an invaluable aid to those breast cancer survivors with an interest in taking the long view of their illness. It's a little too easy to lose perspective if one only reads the newspapers and magazines. There one finds headlines and claims about great strides being made ever since maps of the genome were first produced in 2000, ever since Herceptin was touted in 1999 as a cutting-edge therapy that attacked some forms of breast cancer at the genetic level. Though these breakthroughs are considerable and praiseworthy, Olson's book shows that, in reality, humanity has made a long, slow crawl toward understanding and treating breast cancer. — Nick Owchar

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
Prologue: Across Time1
1Dark Ages9
2"Unkindest Cut of All": The Origins of the Mastectomy27
3William Stewart Halsted and the Radical Mastectomy45
4Superradicals and the Medicine of Mutilation65
5New Beginnings: Assault on the Radical Mastectomy86
6Beauty and the Breast: The Great American Obsession100
7Out of the Closet: Breast Cancer in the 1970s124
8Patient Heal Thyself: Quacks and Cures in the Age of Narcissism145
9Choices: Medical Treatment in the Age of Liberation171
10The Breast Cancer Wars192
11Biology, Society, and Destiny221
Epilogue: The New Millennium243
Notes263
Index291

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