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The Nazi War on Cancer

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Collaboration in the Holocaust. Murderous and torturous medical experiments. The "euthanasia" of hundreds of thousands of people with mental or physical disabilities.

Widespread sterilization of "the unfit". Nazi doctors committed these and countless other atrocities as part of Hitler's warped quest to create a German master race.

The author of this text, Robert Proctor, made the discovery however, that Nazi Germany was also decades ahead of other countries in promoting health reforms that we today regard as progressive and socially responsible.

Most startling of all, he argues, Nazi scientists were the first to definitively link lung cancer and cigarette smoking.

Proctor explores the controversial and troubling questions that such findings raise: were the Nazis more complext morally than we thought?

Can good science come from an evil regime? What might this reveal about health activism in our own society?

Proctor argues that we must view Hitler's Germany more subtly than we have in the past. But he also concludes that the Nazis' forward-looking health activism ultimately came from the same twisted root as their medical crimes: the ideal of a sanitary racial utopia reserved exclusively for pure and healthy Germans.

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Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691001960 / 9780691001968
Hardback
09/05/1999
United States
English
380 pages, 40 halftones, 5 tables
152 x 229 mm, 709 grams
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More