

Susan Sontag’s celebrated essays on cancer and AIDS now available in one volume. In 1978, Sontag wrote Illness as Metaphor , a classic work described by Newsweek as “one of the most liberating books of its time.” A cancer patient herself when she was writing the book, Sontag shows how the metaphors and myths surrounding certain illnesses, especially cancer, add greatly to the suffering of patients and often inhibit them from seeking proper treatment. By demystifying the fantasies surrounding cancer, Sontag shows cancer for what it is―just a disease. Cancer, she argues, is not a curse, not a punishment, certainly not an embarrassment; and it is highly curable, if good treatment is followed. Almost a decade later, with the outbreak of a new, stigmatized disease replete with mystifications and punitive metaphors, Sontag wrote a sequel to Illness as Metaphor , extending the argument of the earlier book to the AIDS pandemic. These two essays now published together, Illness as Metaphor and AIDS and Its Metaphors , have been translated into many languages and continue to have an enormous influence on the thinking of medical professionals and, above all, on the lives of many thousands of patients and caregivers. Review: Good book - Exactly as described Review: The far reaching metaphors of illness - A good reference book for understanding the human condition. Illness and ubiquitousness of it take us To a sometimes unreadable place. As Susan puts words to her experience and ponders, it researches it and rereads it herself 10 years later she put illness in perspective and should us how we make metaphors out of it that are far reaching. TB ,cancer and then AIDS.
| Best Sellers Rank | #205,355 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #8 in AIDS (Books) #89 in Sociological Study of Medicine #381 in Literary Criticism & Theory |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 435 Reviews |
S**E
Good book
Exactly as described
A**R
The far reaching metaphors of illness
A good reference book for understanding the human condition. Illness and ubiquitousness of it take us To a sometimes unreadable place. As Susan puts words to her experience and ponders, it researches it and rereads it herself 10 years later she put illness in perspective and should us how we make metaphors out of it that are far reaching. TB ,cancer and then AIDS.
D**N
Publisher finish lacking
The book did not have a glossary or an index at the back to identify concepts in the book and I believe this was unprofessional. The publishers should have sorted that out. Any reader of serious authors expects these niceties for easy reference. However as a scholar, follower and disciple of Sontag for a life time, I believe she has few peers. She cuts through the facades of life, finding the kernel of truth. She is worth reading again and again. Every student of philosophy and English should read everyone of Sontag's works. Each time I read her I find something I have missed - a nuance, deliberate ambituity and confrontation with our beguiling evasion of what is really happening in our society. I write this decades on from her first publication and obervation of 'life' and yet I notice it could be a rendition of modern life.
J**N
Still relevant
An important concept is discussed in this book: the idea that diseases come with a set of what Sontag calls metaphors, but what I would term associations, that have little if any relevance to the true nature of the disease. I can think of many current examples of diseases that are freighted with non-medical associations. Addiction is one that comes to mind. Another is the “epidemic” of gun violence, which, like AIDS, is being blamed on a marginal group, the mentally ill. Other less politically fraught include obesity & chronic fatigue syndrome, which, like cancer as discussed in the book, have the metaphorical baggage of somehow being rooted in the character of the sufferer. We would, according to Sontag, be better off with a medical model for these conditions, so that appropriate knowledge about them can be sought & cures secured.
M**E
Interesting, but overrated
This book was recommended to me soooo many times when I was interviewing at medical schools, and sat on my to-read list forever. I think it is some sort of classic or something. Finally got to it. Didn't abandon it, but not wowed. The author makes some interesting observations on the ways some talk (write/represent in fiction) about certain illnesses. I am not totally convinced of the ubiquitousness of these metaphors. That aside, I would have liked her to spell out more clearly how she thinks these metaphors influence behavior and policy. I believe they do, but I felt she spent a lot of words describing and illustrating the metaphors, and was kind of vague about the problems they cause.
W**L
Amazingly well-written and researched.
Fascinating. I had heard of Ms. Sontang over the years, but this is the first time I've ever read one of her works. Siddhartha Mukherjee mentions her a lot in The Emperor of All Maladies, so I thought I'd give it a read. She really knew how to write. Very well-researched work on the history of how society conceptualizes illness.
A**H
Great book very sad
Really good read, nice quality book too
E**O
interesting
Disease manifests itself for many reasons, this book is a masterful telling of how, one can receive and live through the effects of several, my heart pounded as I read and I even felt I had tB, powerful!
E**A
Great book
A brilliant book, so useful for my PhD, and as a disability studies scholar!
七**一
人類は病気を如何に表象してきたか
昨年亡くなった、スーザン・ソンタグの、病気とその比喩の社会的意味連関に関する有名な論考。ロマン主義の時代には、ラ・ボエームのミミやショパンに見られるように、肺結核が「洗練」や「繊細」の表象として機能していたが、癌は「侵略」するものとして表象されていた。前者はやがて白血病に取って代わられた。ナチスは、帝国から「癌」を一掃することに心血を注いだ。現代では、グローバル化の到来とともに、疾病や病気を特定の文化や民族と結びつける表象は機能しえない。全てが、発生とともに直ちに世界全体の問題として認識される。ソンタグは、エイズや環境問題を、この文脈で論じているが、今ならさしずめテロリズムもそれに加えたいところだ。一種の、表象文化論であり、一読に値する。英語は概ね平易だが、非常に長い挿入句が多い、典型的なアカデミック英語なので、やや意味の取りにくいところもある。しかし、全く難解ではない。2度、3度と読み直せば、そのたびに新しい発見をもたらしてくれるであろうし、受験生なども読むと良いと思う。
B**R
Five Stars
Item received in a timely manner and as described.
A**E
Brilliant insight
Sontag explains how, when faced with diseases we do not understand and for which we lack a real causal explanation, we are tempted to construct a myth which effectively places the blame on the person's pscyhe or personality. Once the real physical causes of a disease are understood, the stigma and the myth evaporate. She uses the case of TB to illustrate perfectly the myths of the TB personality that were created and evaporated once it was understood that TB was caused by the tubercolosis bacterium and cured by antibiotics. The upshot for patients today of such diseases is that they must resist the myths. Even today you will find alternative medicine practicioners blaming cancers on the repressed personality of the patient, rather than a virus or hormones over which the patient lacks complete control. Even saying that stress brings on the disease is really failing to provide an explanation and suggesting that the patient failed to control their stress. Ultimately these myths serve the people who construct them to maintain their false belief that they can avoid such diseases and that perfect health and perfect bodies are within their control. In other words, the mythology helps the lucky well to maintain their false belief in their invulnerability rather than their common vulnerability as human beings.
P**E
Five Stars
"one of the most liberating books of our time" SO TRUE...
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