Disguised as the DevilWas the Devil's Mark found on the skin of accused witches really the Bull's Eye Rash found on Lyme disease victims? While most historians have focused on the Salem Witch hunt as a religious or social event, this book looks for the first time at the historic landscape and environment. This past reveals a tick risky world where both accused witches and their supposed victims develop red marks on their bodies. Did the afflicted suffer from Lyme disease in the past? There are parallels between the past and modern treatment of patients who exhibit chronic symptoms and the way that some of the physicians who try to help them are viewed by society - some have them been subjected to a modern version of a witch-hunt. Using the latest in scientific and historical research this book tells a compelling tale about the timeless importance of the interactions between humanity and the "invisible world" of bacteria. |
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
AFFLICTION | 31 |
PREDICTING RISK | 77 |
A COMPARISON | 96 |
THINKING IN TIME | 103 |
WAS IT LYME DISEASE ? | 117 |
SCURVY DÉJÀ VU? VI THE PIG IN THE PROMISED LAND 137 | 137 |
WHY WOMEN? | 148 |
PLACE POLITICS AND SOCIAL CONTEXT | 187 |
CONCLUSIONS | 205 |
A Seventeenth Century Clothing | 222 |
Vitamin C Content of Foods Antimicrobial Activity | 229 |
E European Tick Infection rates | 236 |
H Population Change Model | 259 |
274 | |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS | 283 |
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Common terms and phrases
accused witch acorns afflicted animals antibiotics bacteria Bb bacteria birds body Borrelia burgdorferi Boston Bradford Cape Cod cattle caused chronic Lyme disease Connecticut Cotton Mather created cultural described devil diagnosis diet drought early ECASWVI effect endemic area England environmental especially Europe genetic guidelines historic human hunting IDSA included Infectious Diseases Ixodes scapularis Ixodes scapularis ticks Ixodes ticks John Winthrop Journal land landscape Little Ice Age lived Lyme borreliosis Lyme disease Lyme disease incidence Lyme disease Risk marks Mary Massachusetts Bay Colony mice modern Native American neurological North America nymphal pain patients percent pigs pins Plymouth Puritan rash records risk for Lyme Salem Village Salem Witch Trials Salem Witchcraft scientific scurvy settlement seventeenth century sickness skin social spirochete suffered symptoms tick population ticks University Press vaccine vitamin vitamin D white tailed deer William Witch Trials witch-hunts Witchcraft accusations wood York