Making a New Countryside

Health Policies and Practices in European History ca. 1860-1950

Josep Lluis Barona Vilar editor Astri Andresen editor Steven Cherry editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Peter Lang AG

Published:18th Feb '10

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Making a New Countryside cover

How and why did ‘the rural’ emerge as a medico-political problem, and how was this issue addressed in different parts of Europe? This book investigates how rural environments became associated with particularised concepts of sickness and health, and how such views changed over time. Responses, in the form of successful and failed attempts to make a ‘new’ countryside, are analysed at local, regional and national levels – to some extent also involving international dimensions – covering sanitary and social campaigns, legislation and regulation, as well as the establishment and functioning of health services. The volume demonstrates the ambiguous position of rural society in European culture and politics. ‘The rural’ represented the good, clean, and unspoilt; yet it was perceived as backwards, uncivilised, and on the margins of ‘the modern’. This volume shows how medical science and medical practitioners contributed both to the ambiguity of ‘the rural’ and to the ‘civilisation’ of country-dwellers, and additionally demonstrates the strong political and cultural positions held by rural populations in some of the countries.

ISBN: 9783631596531

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 370g

212 pages

New edition