Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Murders and miracles: Lay attitudes towards medicine in classical antiquity
- 3 Puritan perceptions of illness in seventeenth century England
- 4 In sickness and in health: A seventeenth century family's experience
- 5 Participant or patient? Seventeenth century childbirth from the mother's point of view
- 6 Piety and the patient: Medicine and religion in eighteenth century Bristol
- 7 Cultural habits of illness: The Enlightened and the Pious in eighteenth century Germany
- 8 ‘The doctor scolds me’: The diaries and correspondence of patients in eighteenth century England
- 9 Prescribing the rules of health: Self-help and advice in the late eighteenth century
- 10 Laymen, doctors and medical knowledge in the eighteenth century: The evidence of the Gentleman's Magazine
- 11 The colonisation of traditional Arabic medicine
- Index
10 - Laymen, doctors and medical knowledge in the eighteenth century: The evidence of the Gentleman's Magazine
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Murders and miracles: Lay attitudes towards medicine in classical antiquity
- 3 Puritan perceptions of illness in seventeenth century England
- 4 In sickness and in health: A seventeenth century family's experience
- 5 Participant or patient? Seventeenth century childbirth from the mother's point of view
- 6 Piety and the patient: Medicine and religion in eighteenth century Bristol
- 7 Cultural habits of illness: The Enlightened and the Pious in eighteenth century Germany
- 8 ‘The doctor scolds me’: The diaries and correspondence of patients in eighteenth century England
- 9 Prescribing the rules of health: Self-help and advice in the late eighteenth century
- 10 Laymen, doctors and medical knowledge in the eighteenth century: The evidence of the Gentleman's Magazine
- 11 The colonisation of traditional Arabic medicine
- Index
Summary
For the nineteenth century the history of English medicine has long since ceased to be written as though it were simply the annals of heroic doctors and epoch-making breakthroughs. That old warhorse, the epic of medical progress, featuring The Revolution in Victorian Medicine and the consequent deliverance (as two recent popular books put it) from The Age of Agony to The Age of Miracles, has for some time now been comprehensively challenged by a variety of alternative ways of seeing.
For example, complementing Ackerknecht's work, the late Michel Foucault argued that The Birth of the Clinic spelt a revolution in ‘medical gaze’, with the new normative and technological order of the hospital entailing fresh diagnostic epistemologies and disease representations, all generating vast medical power. Paralleling and to some degree overlapping with Foucault, many medical sociologists have trained their spotlight on professionalization as the great dynamo of medical transformation. Their timely attention to professional ambitions further reminds us that the Victorian age saw the rise of the public health movement, and other critical encounters in medicine's equivocal relations with the state; and this in turn has implications for what one school of investigators has dubbed the ‘medicalization of life’ – a concept often linked with polemical exposés of the ‘disabling professions’ and ‘the expropriation of health’, and with a radical desire to demystify medicine's allegedly hegemonic role as a secular and naturalizing instrument of ‘social control’. Of course, as ‘medicalization’ proceeded and orthodoxy sandbagged its citadel in the Victorian age, ‘alternative’ medical therapies became steadily more marginalized; and awareness of this polarization has informed recent explorations of radical and plebeian medicine.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Patients and PractitionersLay Perceptions of Medicine in Pre-industrial Society, pp. 283 - 314Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1986
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