|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
This book explores medical and health periodicals of the nineteenth
century: their contemporary significance, their readership, and how
historians have approached them as objects of study. From debates
about women doctors in lesser-known titles such as the Medical
Mirror, to the formation of professional medical communities within
French and Portuguese periodicals, the contributors to this volume
highlight the multi-faceted nature of these publications as well as
their uses to the historian. Medical periodicals – far from being
the preserve of doctors and nurses – were also read by the
general public. Thus, the contributions collected here will be of
interest not only to the historian of medicine, but also to those
interested in nineteenth-century periodical culture more broadly.
The chapters in this book were originally published as a special
issue of the journal Media History.
This book explores medical and health periodicals of the nineteenth
century: their contemporary significance, their readership, and how
historians have approached them as objects of study. From debates
about women doctors in lesser-known titles such as the Medical
Mirror, to the formation of professional medical communities within
French and Portuguese periodicals, the contributors to this volume
highlight the multi-faceted nature of these publications as well as
their uses to the historian. Medical periodicals - far from being
the preserve of doctors and nurses - were also read by the general
public. Thus, the contributions collected here will be of interest
not only to the historian of medicine, but also to those interested
in nineteenth-century periodical culture more broadly. The chapters
in this book were originally published as a special issue of the
journal Media History.
This open access book looks at the dramatic history of ovariotomy,
an operation to remove ovarian tumours first practiced in the early
nineteenth century. Bold and daring, surgeons who performed it
claimed to be initiating a new era of surgery by opening the
abdomen. Ovariotomy soon occupied a complex position within
medicine and society, as an operation which symbolised surgical
progress, while also remaining at the boundaries of ethical
acceptability. This book traces the operation's innovation, from
its roots in eighteenth-century pathology, through the denouncement
of those who performed it as 'belly-rippers', to its rapid uptake
in the 1880s, when ovariotomists were accused of over-operating.
Throughout the century, the operation was never a hair's breadth
from controversy.
|
|