ABSTRACT

Social and Cultural Lives of Immune Systems introduces a provocative new hypothesis in medico-social theory - the theory that immunity and disease are in part socially constituted. It argues that immune systems function not just as biological entities but also as symbolic concepts charged with political significance. Bridging elements of psychology, sociology, body theory, immunology and medical anthropology, twelve papers from leading scholars explain some of the health-hazards of emotional and social pressure, whilst analysing the semiotic and social responses to the imagery of immunity.

chapter |14 pages

psychobiological context

The impact of disclosure on self- generation and immunity

chapter |97 pages

live by

chapter |21 pages

function in Samoan adolescents

Toward a cross-cultural psychoneuroimmunology

chapter |15 pages

and psychosomatic illness

Lessons for psychoneuroimmunology from beyond the conscious mind

chapter |63 pages

placebo effect

Ulcers, anxiety, and blood pressure

chapter |50 pages

immunological kind

The social dimensions of psychoneuroimmunology