Oral health is integral to well-being and quality of life. This important edited volume brings together leading scholars to address global oral health and the multiple ways in which theory, practice and discourse have shaped it in the modern period.
Oral health is integral to well-being and quality of life. This important edited volume brings together leading scholars to address global oral health and the multiple ways in which theory, practice and discourse have shaped it in the modern period.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Claire L. Jones is Senior Lecturer in the History of Medicine at the University of Kent, UK Barry J. Gibson is Professor in Medical Sociology in the University of Sheffield's School of Clinical Dentistry, UK.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Oral health: an interdisciplinary or multidisciplinary approach? Part I: Professionalism ethics and inequalities 2. Do dentists' views on professionalism include moral inclusiveness? 3. Designing healthy smiles 4. Feminism pipelines and gender myths: interrogating gender equality and inclusion in dentistry Part II: Cultural representations of the mouth and teeth 5. Toothy tales: dentures in the writings of H. Rider Haggard and Rudyard Kipling 6. Metaphors in the mouth: on dental fitness and iatronormativity 7. 'DO AS YOUR DENTIST TELLS YOU': mouthwash advertising in interwar America 8. Science beauty and health: the explosion of toothpaste advertising in interwar America Part III: The patient's perspective 9. Tommy's teeth: trench mouth dentures and dental health among British army recruits in World War One 10. The mouth as the gateway to the leaky body: the visibility of internal bleeding in the mouths of people with haemophilia 11. 'Having work done': the teeth mouth and oral health as a body project Part IV: State surveillance and social justice 12. 'Enlightened employers of labour'? Oral health in the British factory 1890-1950 13. The state of tooth decay: dental knowledge medical policy and fluoridation in Sweden 1952-62 14. The cultural politics of dental humanitarianism
1. Oral health: an interdisciplinary or multidisciplinary approach? Part I: Professionalism ethics and inequalities 2. Do dentists' views on professionalism include moral inclusiveness? 3. Designing healthy smiles 4. Feminism pipelines and gender myths: interrogating gender equality and inclusion in dentistry Part II: Cultural representations of the mouth and teeth 5. Toothy tales: dentures in the writings of H. Rider Haggard and Rudyard Kipling 6. Metaphors in the mouth: on dental fitness and iatronormativity 7. 'DO AS YOUR DENTIST TELLS YOU': mouthwash advertising in interwar America 8. Science beauty and health: the explosion of toothpaste advertising in interwar America Part III: The patient's perspective 9. Tommy's teeth: trench mouth dentures and dental health among British army recruits in World War One 10. The mouth as the gateway to the leaky body: the visibility of internal bleeding in the mouths of people with haemophilia 11. 'Having work done': the teeth mouth and oral health as a body project Part IV: State surveillance and social justice 12. 'Enlightened employers of labour'? Oral health in the British factory 1890-1950 13. The state of tooth decay: dental knowledge medical policy and fluoridation in Sweden 1952-62 14. The cultural politics of dental humanitarianism
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