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Keith Wailoo
Keith Wailoo — Pain: A Political History
Wednesday, April 30th, 2014 at 6PM — Labyrinth Books Princeton

People in chronic pain have always sought relief -- and have always been judged -- but who decides whether someone is truly in pain? The story of pain in politics is more than rhetoric; it is a story of ailing bodies, broken lives, illness, and disability that has vexed government agencies and politicians from the World War II era to the present. Keith Wailoo tells this story and examines why and how pain and compassionate relief has been a battleground for defining the line between society's liberal and conservative trends. Labyrinth Books and the Woodrow Wilson School invite you to join us for a discussion with the author on these crucial and timely issues.

Tracing both the development of pain theories in politics, medicine, law, and society, and battles over the morality and economics of relief, Wailoo points to a tension at the heart of the conservative-liberal divide. Beginning with the post-WWII emergence of a pain relief economy in response to concerns about recovering soldiers, Wailoo explores the 1960s rise of an expansive liberal pain standard, along with the emerging conviction that subjective pain was real, disabling, and compensable. These concepts were attacked during the Reagan era of the 1980s, when a conservative political backlash led to a decreasing disability aid and the growing role of the courts as arbiters in the liberal-conservative struggle to define pain.

Wailoo identifies new fronts in pain politics opened in the 1990s in states like Oregon and Michigan where advocates for death with dignity insisted that end-of-life pain warranted full relief. In the 2006 drug arrest of conservative talk show host Rush Limbaugh, Wailoo finds a cautionary tale about deregluation, which spawned an unmanageable market in pain relief products as well as gaps between the overmedicated and the undertreated. Today's debates over who is in pain, who feels another's pain, and what relief they deserve are new chapters of this enduring battle between liberal relief and conservative care.

Keith Wailoo is the Townsend Martin Professor of History and Public Affairs and Vice Dean of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University. He is author, among other books, of The Troubled Dream of Genetic Medicine; Drawing Blood: Technology and Disease Identity in Twentieth-Century America; Dying in the City of Blues; and How Cancer Crossed the Color Line.

 
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