Bad Blood (Paperback)
James H. Jones / Free Pr / 1992년 12월
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They justified slavery and, after its abolition,
second-class citizenship by insisting that blacks were incapa-ble of assuming any higher station in life. Too many differencesseparated the races. And here "different" unquestionablymeant "inferior." - P17

But physicians extrapolated from individual cases to the entire race because they wished to defend slayery. - P18

Indeed, a sizable portion of the income ofmany southern physicians was derived from the care and treat-ment of slaves. - P19

White physicians of the late nineteenth and early twentiethcenturies blamed the decline in black health on self-destructivebehavioral traits. In addition to discussions of weak constitu-tions and inherent susceptibility to disease, physicians ham-mered away at the black man‘s distaste for honest labor, fond-ness for alcohol, proclivity to crime and sexual vices, disregardfor personal hygiene, ignorance of the laws of good nutrition,
and total indifference to his own health. A standard feature ofthe vast majority of medical articles on the health of blackswas a sociomedical profile of a race whose members were rap-idly becoming diseased, debilitated, and debauched, and hadonly themselves to blame.‘ - P21


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