mercredi 17 février 2021

Dernier numéro de Social History of Medicine

Social History of Medicine, Volume 33, Issue 4, November 2020

 

Original Articles


‘A Double Care’: Prayer as Therapy in Early Modern England
Sophie Mann
 

‘To Be Shut Up’: New Evidence for the Development of Quarantine Regulations in Early-Tudor England
Euan C Roger

Medical Merchandising and Legal Procedure in Late Sixteenth-Century Spain: The Case of Petroleum as Imported Medicine
Ted Lars Lennart Bergman

Treating Hernias in Ottoman Crete (c. 1670–1760): The Legal Imprint of a Medical Procedure
Antonis Anastasopoulos, Christos Kyriakopoulos
 
Medicalised Battlefields: The Evolution of Military Medical Care and the ‘Medic’ in Japan
Reut Harari

Clinical practices: Epilepsy at the National Hospital for the Paralysed and Epileptic, London, from 1860 to 1870
Alejandra Vieyra, Ana Barahona

The Wife as Family Physician: Making and Moving a Modern Health Epistemology for Women
Corinna Treitel
 
‘Death Germs Through the Post’: Postal Pathology and Workplace Experiences of Disease in Britain, c.1895–1935
Laura Newman

The ‘Dog Doctors’ of Edwardian London: Elite Canine Veterinary Care in the Early Twentieth Century
Alison Skipper

Differences in Health: The Influence of Gender and Institutional Settings on Sickness Claims in Gothenburg, Sweden (1898–1950)
Helene Castenbrandt, Barbara Ana Revuelta-Eugercios, Kjell Torén

Helping Troubled Children and Cultivating the Race: The Mental Hygienic Guidance Centres of the Public Health Association of Swedish Finland, 1930s–1950s
Sophy Bergenheim

Literacy, Advocacy and Agency: The Campaign for Political Recognition of Dyslexia in Britain (1962–1997)
Philip Kirby

No Man’s Land? Gendering Contraception in Family Planning Advice Literature in State-Socialist Poland (1950s–1980s)
Agata Ignaciuk
 
The Curious Case of Aleksandar Milivojević: The Donja Toponica Hospital and Mental Health in Socialist Yugoslavia
Ivan Simic


Sources and Resources

Sources and Resources Affidavits in Proceedings in Lunacy, 1719–1733: The Court of Chancery and the Fate of Lunatics in the Long Eighteenth Century
Ruth Paley


Book Reviews

Bruce T. Moran, Paracelsus: An Alchemical Life.
Jole Shackelford

Hannah Newton, Misery to Mirth: Recovery from Illness in Early Modern England
Michael Stolberg
 
John Henderson, Florence Under Siege: Surviving Plague in an Early Modern City
Jane Stevens Crawshaw

Emily Cock, Rhinoplasty and the Nose in Early Modern British Medicine and Culture
Paolo Savoia

Hannah Murphy, A New Order of Medicine: The Rise of Physicians in Reformation Nuremberg
Annemarie Kinzelbach
 
Alex Chase-Levenson, The Yellow Flag: Quarantine and the British Mediterranean World, 1780–1860
Marina Inì
 
Wendy Gonaver, The Peculiar Institution and the Making of Modern Psychiatry, 1840-1880, Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2018. Pp. 268. $32.95. ISBN 978 1 4696 4844 6
Christienna Fryar

Chris S. Duvall, The African Roots of Cannabis
David A Guba, Jr.

Leo van Bergen, The Dutch East Indies Red Cross, 1870–1950. On Humanitarianism and Colonialism
Sebastiaan Broere

Benjamin Kingsbury, The Dark Island: Leprosy in New Zealand and the Quail Island Colony.
Violeta Gilabert
 
Michael E. Staub, The Mismeasure of Minds: Debating Race and Intelligence between Brown and The Bell Curve, Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2018. Pp. 232. $29.95. ISBN 978-1-4696-4359-5
Lundy Braun

David Luesink, William H. Schneider and Zhang Daqing (eds), China and the Globalization of Biomedicine.
Joshua A Hubbard
 
Samuel K. Cohn Jr., Epidemics: Hate and Compassion from the Plague of Athens to AIDS
Flurin Condrau

Simon Szreter (ed.), The Hidden Affliction: Sexually Transmitted Infections and Infertility in History
Roger Davidson

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