Diseased, maimed, mutilated: categorizations of disability and an ugly law in late nineteenth-century Chicago [0.03%]
疾病、残废与畸形:19世纪后期芝加哥的残疾分类与一项丑恶法律
Adrienne Phelps Coco
Adrienne Phelps Coco
The article places Chicago's "ugly" law—an 1881 municipal ordinance that fined "any person who is diseased, maimed, mutilated or in any way deformed so as to be an unsightly or disgusting object" for appearing in public—within the context...
"We mentally ill smoke a lot": identity, smoking, and mental illness in America [0.03%]
“我们精神病患者烟瘾很大”——美国精神疾病患者的身份认知与吸烟问题
Laura Hirshbein
Laura Hirshbein
Most of the history of the tobacco industry over the last few decades has focused on the conflicts between tobacco industry leaders who promoted smoking and tobacco control advocates who warned of the health consequences. Yet a view of this...