Susan Sontag's Exploration of AIDS and Its Metaphors

By: Susan Sontag (Author)

Susan Sontag's AIDs and Its Metaphors is one of the best Books on AIDS and HIV, offering high-quality binding and pages, easy-to-read text, and an overall satisfying experience. With its insightful metaphors and engaging narrative, this book is a must-read for anyone looking to gain a deeper understanding of the AIDS epidemic.

Key Features:

Susan Sontag's book, Aids and Its Metaphors, explores the powerful metaphors associated with the AIDS epidemic and how they shape public perception of the disease. Sontag examines how language has been used to characterize AIDS and how this has impacted the way the world views those affected by the virus. Through her analysis of literature, film, art, and other media, Sontag reveals how the metaphors surrounding AIDS have been used to create stigma and prejudice against those living with the virus. In her book, Sontag also offers a powerful critique of the ways in which the media has shaped public opinion of AIDS and its sufferers. Aids and Its Metaphors is an important and thought-provoking read that sheds
70
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3 reviews

Review rating details

Value for money
66
Overall satisfaction
70
Genre
66
Easy to understand
76
Binding and pages quality
66

Details of Susan Sontag's Exploration of AIDS and Its Metaphors

  • Dimensions ‏ ‎: 5.2 x 0.6 x 8.3 inches
  • ISBN-13 ‏ ‎: 978-0374102579
  • Publisher ‏ ‎: Farrar, Straus and Giroux; First Edition
  • ISBN-10 ‏ ‎: 0374102570
  • Sociological Study of Medicine: Sociological Study of Medicine
  • British & Irish Poetry: British & Irish Poetry
  • Best Sellers Rank: #838 in Sociological Study of Medicine#1,112 in British & Irish Poetry
  • Item Weight ‏ ‎: 9.6 ounces
  • Hardcover ‏ ‎: 95 pages
  • Customer Reviews: 4.5/5 stars of 381 ratings
  • Language ‏ ‎: English

Comments

Emmanuel Nwankwo: 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!

United States on Aug 03, 2023

maria: This book was disappointing considering the status of its author

United Kingdom on Jun 23, 2023

Ally Smith: Really good read, nice quality book too

United States on May 03, 2023

Lyndon Rudolph: Must read for anyone cancer or HIV has touched

United States on Aug 27, 2022

Anne: 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...

Australia on Jul 29, 2021

evilturkey: Book itself is fine. However I got sent a book with a different cover than the one pictured.

United Kingdom on Nov 16, 2020

Carlos Lesmes: The book is in good shape and good quality overall.

Germany on Jan 04, 2020

Jack G Kleinman: 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.

United States on Feb 18, 2018

Judith Miller: I found her premise that we tend to demonize illnesses we do not understand. I guess Ebola will be the next metaphor for evil.

Canada on Oct 03, 2014

Denise Bjorkman: 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.

United States on Apr 04, 2013



Susan Sontag's Exploration of AIDS and Its Metaphors Nurses On The Inside: Valery Hughes, M.D. Shares Stories of the HIV/AIDS Epidemic in NYC Borrowed Time: A Memoir of Living with AIDS
Susan Sontag's Exploration of AIDS and Its Metaphors Nurses On The Inside: Valery Hughes, M.D. Shares Stories of the HIV/AIDS Epidemic in NYC Borrowed Time: A Memoir of Living with AIDS
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Total Reviews 3 reviews 32 reviews 6 reviews
Dimensions ‏ ‎ 5.2 x 0.6 x 8.3 inches 5.25 x 0.61 x 8 inches 5 x 0.89 x 8 inches
ISBN-13 ‏ ‎ 978-0374102579 978-1951072018 978-0156005814
Publisher ‏ ‎ Farrar, Straus and Giroux; First Edition Tree District Books Harper Perennial; First Edition
ISBN-10 ‏ ‎ 0374102570 1951072014 0156005816
Sociological Study of Medicine Sociological Study of Medicine
British & Irish Poetry British & Irish Poetry
Best Sellers Rank #838 in Sociological Study of Medicine#1,112 in British & Irish Poetry #114 in AIDS & HIV #391 in Dramas & Plays by Women #16 in AIDS & HIV #252 in LGBTQ+ Biographies #409 in Medical Professional Biographies
Item Weight ‏ ‎ 9.6 ounces 10.1 ounces 13.6 ounces
Hardcover ‏ ‎ 95 pages
Customer Reviews 4.5/5 stars of 381 ratings 4.6/5 stars of 266 ratings 4.7/5 stars of 371 ratings
Language ‏ ‎ English English English
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