Becsei Kilborn, Eva (Author)
The observation made by Peyton Rous in 1911 that cancer could be caused by a virus was received with skepticism by the scientific community which held that cancer could not be the result of a microorganism. Having failed to produce persuasive evidence, Rous felt compelled to abandon his work on cancer viruses. Fifty-five years later, however, Rous was awarded the Nobel Prize for his cancer work. The study of Rous's viral theory of cancer provides a lens that will help to illuminate several episodes in the history of cancer research in particular, and the nature of scientific research in general. This study uncovers the reasons why Rous abandoned his cancer work in 1915, why he resumed it in the 1930s and how a small network of researchers helped to sustain Rous's viral program. A detailed analysis of Rous's interaction with other cancer researchers unveils the nature of the debate surrounding the viral theory of cancer, in particular how it was shaped by the underlying tension between clinic and laboratory. The reemergence of the viral theory in the 1950s and the impact of developments in post-World War II medical technology highlight the historical processes that drove cancer research in the United States in the second half of the twentieth century. By locating Rous within the context of research at the Rockefeller Institute, the study examines the ways in which research is shaped through the multiple influences of local research contexts, laboratory traditions, and scientific paradigms, as well as by broader social and political factors. This study is informed by recent scholarship in the history of science and cultural studies which demonstrates that science is not derived from fundamental laws, but is rather the product of a consensus worked out by a collective of people in specific places and times. Medical science is seen to be the result of the complex interplay between medical theory, social values, institutional imperatives, technological development, and human agency.
...MoreDescription Cited in Diss. Abstr. Int. A 64 (2004): 4174. UMI order no. 3111234.
Article
Becsei-Kilborn, Eva;
(2010)
Scientific Discovery and Scientific Reputation: The Reception of Peyton Rous' Discovery of the Chicken Sarcoma Virus
(/isis/citation/CBB000933111/)
Article
Sankaran, Neeraja;
(2014)
When Viruses Were Not in Style: Parallels in the Histories of Chicken Sarcoma Viruses and Bacteriophages
(/isis/citation/CBB001421657/)
Book
Skloot, Rebecca;
(2010)
The immortal life of Henrietta Lacks
(/isis/citation/CBB438514916/)
Book
Cornwall, Claudia;
(2013)
Catching Cancer: The Quest for Its Viral and Bacterial Causes
(/isis/citation/CBB001213235/)
Book
Neeraja Sankaran;
(2021)
A Tale of Two Viruses: Parallels in the Research Trajectories of Tumor and Bacterial Viruses
(/isis/citation/CBB280830487/)
Article
Mazur, Allan;
Rothman, Stanley;
Lichter, S. Robert;
(2001)
Biases about Man-made Cancer among Researchers
(/isis/citation/CBB000100621/)
Chapter
Moser, Gabriele;
(2010)
Zersplitterung, Gemeinschaftsarbeit, Institutionalisierung: Die deutsche Krebsforschung im Förderungshorizont der Notgemeinschaft/Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, 1920--1970
(/isis/citation/CBB001036192/)
Thesis
Marissa Anne Mika;
(2015)
Research Is Our Resource: Surviving Experiments and Politics at an African Cancer Institute, 1950 to the Present
(/isis/citation/CBB954339362/)
Book
Offit, Paul A.;
(2007)
Vaccinated: One Man's Quest to Defeat the World's Deadliest Diseases
(/isis/citation/CBB001021088/)
Article
Bresalier, Michael;
(2012)
Uses of a Pandemic: Forging the Identities of Influenza and Virus Research in Interwar Britain
(/isis/citation/CBB001210694/)
Article
Marcum, James A.;
(2002)
From Heresy to Dogma in Accounts of Opposition to Howard Temin's DNA Provirus Hypothesis
(/isis/citation/CBB000501150/)
Article
Stark, Laura;
Campbell, Nancy D.;
(2014)
Stowaways in the History of Science: The Case of Simian Virus 40 and Clinical Research on Federal Prisoners at the US National Institutes of Health, 1960
(/isis/citation/CBB001421652/)
Article
Morgan, Gregory J.;
(2014)
Ludwik Gross, Sarah Stewart, and the 1950s Discoveries of Gross Murine Leukemia Virus and Polyoma Virus
(/isis/citation/CBB001421646/)
Article
Clarke, Brendan;
(2014)
Mapping the Methodologies of Burkitt Lymphoma
(/isis/citation/CBB001421648/)
Article
Scheffler, Robin Wolfe;
(2014)
Following Cancer Viruses through the Laboratory, Clinic, and Society
(/isis/citation/CBB001421641/)
Article
Scheffler, Robin Wolfe;
(2014)
Managing the Future: The Special Virus Leukemia Program and the Acceleration of Biomedical Research
(/isis/citation/CBB001421647/)
Book
Gregory J. Morgan;
(2022)
Cancer Virus Hunters: A History of Tumor Virology
(/isis/citation/CBB284978916/)
Book
Thompson, G. R.;
(2012)
Nobel Prizes That Changed Medicine
(/isis/citation/CBB001250519/)
Book
Almond, Peter R.;
(2013)
Cobalt Blues: The Story of Leonard Grimmett, the Man behind the First Cobalt-60 Unit in the United States
(/isis/citation/CBB001213187/)
Book
Marta Bertolaso;
(2016)
Philosophy of Cancer: A Dynamic and Relational View
(/isis/citation/CBB861389798/)
Be the first to comment!