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Books > Medicine > General issues > History of medicine
Chiropractic is by far the most common form of alternative medicine
in the United States today, but its fascinating origins stretch
back to the battles between science and religion in the nineteenth
century. At the center of the story are chiropractic's colorful
founders, D. D. Palmer and his son, B. J. Palmer, of Davenport,
Iowa, where in 1897 they established the Palmer College of
Chiropractic. Holly Folk shows how the Palmers' system depicted
chiropractic as a conduit for both material and spiritualized
versions of a ""vital principle,"" reflecting popular contemporary
therapies and nineteenth-century metaphysical beliefs, including
the idea that the spine was home to occult forces. The creation of
chiropractic, and other Progressive-era versions of alternative
medicine, happened at a time when the relationship between science
and religion took on an urgent, increasingly competitive tinge.
Many remarkable people, including the Palmers, undertook highly
personal reinterpretations of their physical and spiritual worlds.
In this context, Folk reframes alternative medicine and
spirituality as a type of populist intellectual culture in which
ideologies about the body comprise a highly appealing form of
cultural resistance.
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