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Historical Bibliography Updated: October 5, 2021

Professional and popular medicine in France 1770-1830: The social world of medical practice.

Publication Details

Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press, 2002 CE.

"This is the first comprehensive study on a national scale of the entire range of medical practitioners who flourished in preindustrial and early industrial societies. Drawing on a wide variety of sources, it provides a richly detailed examination of medical practice as it existed in France during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Professor Ramsey argues that to penetrate this world, in many ways strangely different from our own, we must join two lines of inquiry: the history of the professions and the history of popular culture. The book considers not only the immediate ancestors of the modern medical profession - university-trained physicians who followed a liberal calling and surgeons who practiced a manual craft - but also the highly diverse group of practitioners who worked without legal authorization: traveling charlatans, local 'urine scanners,' folk healers using herbs and charms, counterwitches, and a great many ordinary people in other trades" (publisher).

Catalog MetadataReference Information
Entry Number#8034
Permanent Linkhttps://hom-sveltekit.fly.dev/entry/10210
External URLprofessional-and-popular-medicine-in-france-17701830-the-social-world-of-medical-practice

Geographic Context

Publication place: Cambridge & New York