
The Antivaccine Heresy
Jacobson v. Massachusetts and the Troubled History of Compulsory Vaccination in the United States
by Karen Walloch
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Pub Date Dec 15 2015 | Archive Date May 02 2016
Boydell & Brewer | University of Rochester Press
Description
Explores the history of vaccine development and the rise of antivaccination societies in late-nineteenth-century America.
Most people today celebrate vaccination as a great achievement, yet many nineteenth-century Americans opposed it, so much in fact that states had to make vaccination compulsory. In response, antivaccination societies formed all over the United States, lobbying state legislatures and bringing lawsuits to abolish these laws. One such lawsuit ultimately arrived at the United States Supreme Court, which upheld the laws in a landmark decision, Jacobson v. Massachusetts (1905). In this study, Karen Walloch examines the history of vaccine development in the United States, the laws put in place enjoining the practice, and the popular reaction against them. Walloch finds that at theend of the nineteenth century Americans had good reason to fear vaccination. Vaccines simply did not live up to claims made for their safety and effectiveness. They induced pain, disability, and grim or even fatal infections. Inthis critical history of the antivaccine movement and of Jacobson v. Massachusetts in particular, Walloch locates the beginnings of a legacy of doubt about vaccination -- one that affected legislation in all fifty states and is still very much alive today.
Karen Walloch is a historian who teaches at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Most people today celebrate vaccination as a great achievement, yet many nineteenth-century Americans opposed it, so much in fact that states had to make vaccination compulsory. In response, antivaccination societies formed all over the United States, lobbying state legislatures and bringing lawsuits to abolish these laws. One such lawsuit ultimately arrived at the United States Supreme Court, which upheld the laws in a landmark decision, Jacobson v. Massachusetts (1905). In this study, Karen Walloch examines the history of vaccine development in the United States, the laws put in place enjoining the practice, and the popular reaction against them. Walloch finds that at theend of the nineteenth century Americans had good reason to fear vaccination. Vaccines simply did not live up to claims made for their safety and effectiveness. They induced pain, disability, and grim or even fatal infections. Inthis critical history of the antivaccine movement and of Jacobson v. Massachusetts in particular, Walloch locates the beginnings of a legacy of doubt about vaccination -- one that affected legislation in all fifty states and is still very much alive today.
Karen Walloch is a historian who teaches at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Advance Praise
One of the best history books ever written about American vaccination
politics and policies, The Antivaccine Heresy will have a significant
audience among medical historians, scholars of public health, and
citizens concerned about similar issues today. Walloch's research is
stunningly thorough; her interpretations challenging, insightful, and
compelling; and her stories are fascinating. This work is truly
pioneering and may well change not only the way history books are
written but also the way that vaccinologists write about the smallpox
vaccine. -- Robert Johnston, editor of The Politics of
Healing
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781580465373 |
PRICE | $130.00 (USD) |
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