Progress and Pathology
Medicine and Culture in the Nineteenth Century
Melissa Dickson editor Sally Shuttleworth editor Emilie Taylor-Brown editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Manchester University Press
Published:31st Jan '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This volume explores changing perceptions of health and disease in the context of the burgeoning global modernities of the nineteenth century. With case studies from Britain, America, France, Germany, Finland, Bengal, China and the South Pacific, it demonstrates how popular and medical understandings of the mind and body were reframed by the social, cultural and political structures of ‘modern life’.
Chapters in the collection examine ways in which cancer, suicide and social degeneration were seen as products of the stresses and strains of ‘new’ ways of living. Others explore the legal, institutional and intellectual changes that contributed to modern medical practice. The volume traces how physiological and psychological problems were constituted in relation to each other and to their social contexts, offering new ways of contextualising the problems of modernity facing us in the twenty-first century.
This book is relevant to United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 3, 'Good health and well-being'.
An electronic edition of this book is freely available under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND) licence.
ISBN: 9781526133687
Dimensions: 216mm x 138mm x 22mm
Weight: 599g
392 pages