Counterpoints in the history of Hansen’s disease in Brazil: situations of stigma and seclusion

Authors

  • Luiz Antonio de Castro Santos UERJ
  • Lina Faria UERJ
  • Ricardo Fernandes de Menezes Secretaria de Estado da Saúde de São Paulo e Secretaria Municipal de Saúde de São Paulo

Keywords:

Leprosy, Brazilian states of São Paulo and Maranhão, Brazil, First Republican period (1889-1930), Vargas Dictatorship (1930-1945), Stigma, Institutionalization

Abstract

As the fight against leprosy in Brazil, particularly in the state of Maranhão, is singled out for analysis, this paper discusses the different medical and ‘profane’ conceptions of the disease, in addition to the proposals of public health intervention, always challenged by rival doctrines or convictions about contagion, diffusion, and treatment. The changing epidemiological, medical (i.e., the practices of isolation), social, and cultural views (particularly the stigma associated with the notions of sin, purity and danger) will help the search for singularities in Maranhão, the state’s main ‘sanitarians’, political actors, and institutions, as well as for common historical elements, among Brazilian and other populations experiencing the disease.

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Published

2008-07-01

How to Cite

Santos, L. A. de C., Faria, L., & Menezes, R. F. de. (2008). Counterpoints in the history of Hansen’s disease in Brazil: situations of stigma and seclusion. Brazilian Journal of Population Studies, 25(1), 167–190. Retrieved from https://rebep.emnuvens.com.br/revista/article/view/180

Issue

Section

Original Articles