Silent travelers

germs, genes, and the "immigrant menace"

369 pages

English language

Published 1995 by Johns Hopkins University Press.

OCLC Number:
31407935

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Epidemics and immigrants have suffered a lethal association in the public mind, from the Irish in New York wrongly blamed for the cholera epidemic of 1832 and Chinese in San Francisco vilified for causing the bubonic plague in 1900, to Haitians in Miami stigmatized as AIDS carriers in the 1980s. Silent Travelers vividly describes these and many other episodes of medicalized prejudice and analyzes their impact on public health policy and beyond.

The book shows clearly how the equation of disease with outsiders and illness with genetic inferiority broadly affected not only immigration policy and health care but even the workplace and schools.

The first synthesis of immigration history and the history of medicine, Silent Travelers is also a deeply human story, enriched by the voices of immigrants themselves. Irish, Italian, Jewish, Latino, Chinese, and Cambodian newcomers among others grapple in these pages with the mysteries of modern medicine and …

2 editions

Subjects

  • Immigrants -- Health and hygiene -- Government policy -- United States
  • Medical policy -- United States
  • Immigrants -- Medical examinations -- United States
  • United States -- Emigration and immigration -- Government policy