Cancer and Syphilis in the Metro

poster - Defendez-vous contre la syphilis poster - le cancer!

When he arrived in Paris in 1930, Henry Miller found the walls of his new city plastered with lurid posters calling for public vigilance against the scourges of syphilis and cancer:

In every Metro station there are grinning skulls that greet you with “Défendez-vous contre la syphilis!” Wherever there are walls, there are posters with bright venomous crabs heralding the approach of cancer. No matter where you go, no matter what you touch, there is cancer and syphilis.1

Miller was fascinated with the posters and the depiction of the crab in particular may have been an inspiration for the title of his novel, Tropic of Cancer. Through these early days in Paris, Miller was under the sway of Michael Fraenkel's 'death theme' and the pages of his novel are littered with references to death and disease.

The syphilis poster above was created between 1924 and 1930 and warns that the disease is contagious and may lead to blindness, paralysis, ataxia and insanity. The crab poster counsels that cancer can be killed if treated early. It was launched in 1930 to coincide with the first national defense-against-cancer week.

Notes

  1. Henry Miller, Tropic of Cancer, 189

The example of the syphilis poster was found at the Wellcome Library in London.

The cancer poster was found at the Institut Curie in Paris.

The June 2005 issue of Le Journal de l'Institut Curie contains an article by Nathalie Huchette providing further information on the publicity campaign behind the cancer poster (PDF - see page 19).



4 Comments
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Anonymous's picture

Hey, I really want one of those for my office.

Anonymous's picture

heh. I could go for a set of these on my wall too. I particularly like the cancer poster.

Anonymous's picture

Though intended presumably as an insight into Miller, this is also a valuable comment on the posters. It is clear from Miller's comment that the date 1910? given previously for the syphilis poster must be too early. I find that the French ministry named on the poster bore that name only from 1924 to 1930, so this very poster would likely have been seen by Miller in Paris in 1930. Many thanks. See http://catalogue.wellcome.ac.uk/search/o47562i

William Schupbach Wellcome Library, London

Anonymous's picture

Hi William.

My only reference to 1910 was the previous content of the page you linked. Thanks for your research and for updating the Wellcome Library page. 1924-1930 is a much more logical time-frame for the poster. I have found another example of the poster at the Assistance Publique Hopitaux de Paris site, and their listing mentions a creation date of 1924 as well.

I've updated my post with your new information.

P.S. It looks like the ca. 1910 date is still on this page at the Wellcome Library.

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