Tag: vaccination

Anti-Vaccination and the Media Historical Perspectives


Free Download Anti-Vaccination and the Media: Historical Perspectives by Allison Cavanagh
English | PDF EPUB (True) | 2024 | 143 Pages | ISBN : 3031705580 | 6.4 MB
This book explores narratives of vaccine hesitancy using samples from the UK press, and looks at the ways these have changed between the 1950s and the present. The work draws on a variety of research instruments including semantic network analysis and analysis of metaphor to provide a rich description of anti-vaccine narratives in different historical periods.

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Cancer Vaccination and Challenges Volume 1


Free Download Cancer Vaccination and Challenges: Volume 1: Strategies for Therapeutic Cancer Vaccine Development
English | 2025 | ISBN: 1774916746 | 417 Pages | PDF (True) | XXX MB
Volume 1: Strategies for Therapeutic Cancer Vaccine Development deals with different strategies of cancer vaccine development, focusing on techniques for the development of therapeutic cancer vaccines and the roles of tumor antigens, proteins/peptides, microbial genes, and stem cells for the development of vaccines for cancer management.

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Bodily Matters The Anti-Vaccination Movement in England, 1853-1907


Free Download Bodily Matters: The Anti-Vaccination Movement in England, 1853-1907 By Nadja Durbach
2005 | 296 Pages | ISBN: 0822334127 | PDF | 2 MB
Bodily Matters explores the anti-vaccination movement that emerged in England in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth in response to government-mandated smallpox vaccination. By requiring a painful and sometimes dangerous medical procedure for all infants, the Compulsory Vaccination Act set an important precedent for state regulation of bodies. From its inception in 1853 until its demise in 1907, the compulsory smallpox vaccine was fiercely resisted, largely by members of the working class who interpreted it as an infringement of their rights as citizens and a violation of their children’s bodies. Nadja Durbach contends that the anti-vaccination movement is historically significant not only because it was arguably the largest medical resistance campaign ever mounted in Europe but also because it clearly articulated pervasive anxieties regarding the integrity of the body and the role of the modern state. Analyzing historical documents on both sides of the vaccination debate, Durbach focuses on the key events and rhetorical strategies of the resistance campaign. She shows that those for and against the vaccine had very different ideas about how human bodies worked and how best to safeguard them from disease. Individuals opposed to mandatory vaccination saw their own and their children’s bodies not as potentially contagious and thus dangerous to society but rather as highly vulnerable to contamination and violation. Bodily Matters challenges the notion that resistance to vaccination can best be understood, and thus easily dismissed, as the ravings of an unscientific "lunatic fringe." It locates the anti-vaccination movement at the very center of broad public debates in Victorian England over medical developments, the politics of class, the extent of government intervention into the private lives of its citizens, and the values of a liberal society.

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Vaccination (Great Discoveries in Science)


Free Download Vaccination (Great Discoveries in Science) by Erik Richardson
English | July 30, 2017 | ISBN: 1502627809 | 139 pages | PDF | 11 Mb
Contemporary vaccination is rooted in centuries of scientific discovery. Some scholars believe that as far back as 1000 CE, Chinese Taoists used variolation (or inoculation) to control the spread of disease. In 1796, Edward Jenner developed a smallpox vaccine that ranks as one of the most important scientific breakthroughs of all time. This book explains how Jenner made his discovery based on the achievements of those who came before him, how vaccination works, and the many ways that vaccines continue to shape science (and generate controversy) today.

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