Mark Jackson
The Oxford Handbook of the History of Medicine
Mark Jackson
The Oxford Handbook of the History of Medicine
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In three sections, the Oxford Handbook of the History of Medicine celebrates the richness and variety of medical history around the world. It explores medical developments and trends in writing history according to period, place, and theme.
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In three sections, the Oxford Handbook of the History of Medicine celebrates the richness and variety of medical history around the world. It explores medical developments and trends in writing history according to period, place, and theme.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 696
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. November 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 255mm x 184mm x 45mm
- Gewicht: 1355g
- ISBN-13: 9780199546497
- ISBN-10: 0199546495
- Artikelnr.: 33718837
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 696
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. November 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 255mm x 184mm x 45mm
- Gewicht: 1355g
- ISBN-13: 9780199546497
- ISBN-10: 0199546495
- Artikelnr.: 33718837
Mark Jackson was Director of the Centre for Medical History at the University of Exeter between 2000 and 2010. He served as Chair of the Wellcome Trust History of Medicine Funding Committee between 2003 and 2008 and is currently Chair of the Wellcome Trust Research Resources in Medical History Funding Committee. He has taught modules in the history of medicine and the history and philosophy of science for over twenty years. His books include Newborn Child Murder (1996), The Borderland of Imbecility (2000), Infanticide: Historical Perspectives on Child Murder and Concealment 1550-2000, (ed., 2002), Allergy: The History of a Modern Malady (2006), Health and the Modern Home (ed., 2007), and Asthma: The Biography (2009). The Age of Stress: Science and the Search for Stability is due to be published by Oxford University Press in 2012.
* 1: Mark Jackson: Introduction
* PART ONE: PERIODS
* 2: Philip van der Eijk: Medicine and health in the Graeco-Roman world
* 3: Peregrine Horden: Medieval medicine
* 4: Thomas Rütten: Early modern medicine
* 5: E. C. Spary: Health and medicine in the Enlightenment
* 6: Roger Cooter: Medicine and modernity
* 7: Virginia Berridge: Contemporary history of medicine and health
* PART TWO: PLACES AND TRADITIONS
* 8: Sanjoy Bhattacharya: Global and local histories of medicine:
interpretative challenges and future possiblities
* 9: Vivienne Lo and Michael Stanley-Baker: Chinese medicine
* 10: Hormoz Ebrahimnejad: Medicine in Islam and Islamic medicine
* 11: Harold J. Cook: Medicine in Western Europe
* 12: Marius Turda: History of medicine in Eastern Europe, including
Russia
* 13: Edmund Ramsden: North America
* 14: Anne-Emanuelle Birn: Latin America
* 15: Lyn Schumaker: History of medicine in Sub-Saharan Africa
* 16: Mark Harrison: Medicine and colonialism in South Asia since 1500
* 17: Linda Bryder: History of medicine in Australia and New Zealand
* PART THREE: THEMES AND METHODS
* 18: Alysa Levene: Childhood and adolescence
* 19: Susannah Ottaway: Medicine and old age
* 20: Julie-Marie Strange: Death
* 21: Graham Mooney: Historical demography and epidemiology: the
meta-narrative challenge
* 22: Carsten Timmermann: Chronic illness and disease history
* 23: Christopher Hamlin: Public health
* 24: Martin Gorsky: The political economy of health care in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries
* 25: Christopher Sellers: Health, work, and environment: a Hippocratic
turn in medical history
* 26: Staffan Müller-Wille: History of science and medicine
* 27: Hilary Marland: Women, health, and medicine
* 28: Gayle Davis: Health and sexuality
* 29: Rhodri Hayward: Medicine and the mind
* 30: Andreas-Holger Maehle: Medical ethics and the law
* 31: Rob Kirk and Michael Worboys: Medicine and species: one medicine,
one history
* 32: Roberta Bivins: Histories of heterodoxy
* 33: Kate Fisher: Oral testimony and the history of medicine
* 34: Timothy Boon: Medical films and television: alternative paths to
the cultures of biomedicine
* PART ONE: PERIODS
* 2: Philip van der Eijk: Medicine and health in the Graeco-Roman world
* 3: Peregrine Horden: Medieval medicine
* 4: Thomas Rütten: Early modern medicine
* 5: E. C. Spary: Health and medicine in the Enlightenment
* 6: Roger Cooter: Medicine and modernity
* 7: Virginia Berridge: Contemporary history of medicine and health
* PART TWO: PLACES AND TRADITIONS
* 8: Sanjoy Bhattacharya: Global and local histories of medicine:
interpretative challenges and future possiblities
* 9: Vivienne Lo and Michael Stanley-Baker: Chinese medicine
* 10: Hormoz Ebrahimnejad: Medicine in Islam and Islamic medicine
* 11: Harold J. Cook: Medicine in Western Europe
* 12: Marius Turda: History of medicine in Eastern Europe, including
Russia
* 13: Edmund Ramsden: North America
* 14: Anne-Emanuelle Birn: Latin America
* 15: Lyn Schumaker: History of medicine in Sub-Saharan Africa
* 16: Mark Harrison: Medicine and colonialism in South Asia since 1500
* 17: Linda Bryder: History of medicine in Australia and New Zealand
* PART THREE: THEMES AND METHODS
* 18: Alysa Levene: Childhood and adolescence
* 19: Susannah Ottaway: Medicine and old age
* 20: Julie-Marie Strange: Death
* 21: Graham Mooney: Historical demography and epidemiology: the
meta-narrative challenge
* 22: Carsten Timmermann: Chronic illness and disease history
* 23: Christopher Hamlin: Public health
* 24: Martin Gorsky: The political economy of health care in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries
* 25: Christopher Sellers: Health, work, and environment: a Hippocratic
turn in medical history
* 26: Staffan Müller-Wille: History of science and medicine
* 27: Hilary Marland: Women, health, and medicine
* 28: Gayle Davis: Health and sexuality
* 29: Rhodri Hayward: Medicine and the mind
* 30: Andreas-Holger Maehle: Medical ethics and the law
* 31: Rob Kirk and Michael Worboys: Medicine and species: one medicine,
one history
* 32: Roberta Bivins: Histories of heterodoxy
* 33: Kate Fisher: Oral testimony and the history of medicine
* 34: Timothy Boon: Medical films and television: alternative paths to
the cultures of biomedicine
* 1: Mark Jackson: Introduction
* PART ONE: PERIODS
* 2: Philip van der Eijk: Medicine and health in the Graeco-Roman world
* 3: Peregrine Horden: Medieval medicine
* 4: Thomas Rütten: Early modern medicine
* 5: E. C. Spary: Health and medicine in the Enlightenment
* 6: Roger Cooter: Medicine and modernity
* 7: Virginia Berridge: Contemporary history of medicine and health
* PART TWO: PLACES AND TRADITIONS
* 8: Sanjoy Bhattacharya: Global and local histories of medicine:
interpretative challenges and future possiblities
* 9: Vivienne Lo and Michael Stanley-Baker: Chinese medicine
* 10: Hormoz Ebrahimnejad: Medicine in Islam and Islamic medicine
* 11: Harold J. Cook: Medicine in Western Europe
* 12: Marius Turda: History of medicine in Eastern Europe, including
Russia
* 13: Edmund Ramsden: North America
* 14: Anne-Emanuelle Birn: Latin America
* 15: Lyn Schumaker: History of medicine in Sub-Saharan Africa
* 16: Mark Harrison: Medicine and colonialism in South Asia since 1500
* 17: Linda Bryder: History of medicine in Australia and New Zealand
* PART THREE: THEMES AND METHODS
* 18: Alysa Levene: Childhood and adolescence
* 19: Susannah Ottaway: Medicine and old age
* 20: Julie-Marie Strange: Death
* 21: Graham Mooney: Historical demography and epidemiology: the
meta-narrative challenge
* 22: Carsten Timmermann: Chronic illness and disease history
* 23: Christopher Hamlin: Public health
* 24: Martin Gorsky: The political economy of health care in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries
* 25: Christopher Sellers: Health, work, and environment: a Hippocratic
turn in medical history
* 26: Staffan Müller-Wille: History of science and medicine
* 27: Hilary Marland: Women, health, and medicine
* 28: Gayle Davis: Health and sexuality
* 29: Rhodri Hayward: Medicine and the mind
* 30: Andreas-Holger Maehle: Medical ethics and the law
* 31: Rob Kirk and Michael Worboys: Medicine and species: one medicine,
one history
* 32: Roberta Bivins: Histories of heterodoxy
* 33: Kate Fisher: Oral testimony and the history of medicine
* 34: Timothy Boon: Medical films and television: alternative paths to
the cultures of biomedicine
* PART ONE: PERIODS
* 2: Philip van der Eijk: Medicine and health in the Graeco-Roman world
* 3: Peregrine Horden: Medieval medicine
* 4: Thomas Rütten: Early modern medicine
* 5: E. C. Spary: Health and medicine in the Enlightenment
* 6: Roger Cooter: Medicine and modernity
* 7: Virginia Berridge: Contemporary history of medicine and health
* PART TWO: PLACES AND TRADITIONS
* 8: Sanjoy Bhattacharya: Global and local histories of medicine:
interpretative challenges and future possiblities
* 9: Vivienne Lo and Michael Stanley-Baker: Chinese medicine
* 10: Hormoz Ebrahimnejad: Medicine in Islam and Islamic medicine
* 11: Harold J. Cook: Medicine in Western Europe
* 12: Marius Turda: History of medicine in Eastern Europe, including
Russia
* 13: Edmund Ramsden: North America
* 14: Anne-Emanuelle Birn: Latin America
* 15: Lyn Schumaker: History of medicine in Sub-Saharan Africa
* 16: Mark Harrison: Medicine and colonialism in South Asia since 1500
* 17: Linda Bryder: History of medicine in Australia and New Zealand
* PART THREE: THEMES AND METHODS
* 18: Alysa Levene: Childhood and adolescence
* 19: Susannah Ottaway: Medicine and old age
* 20: Julie-Marie Strange: Death
* 21: Graham Mooney: Historical demography and epidemiology: the
meta-narrative challenge
* 22: Carsten Timmermann: Chronic illness and disease history
* 23: Christopher Hamlin: Public health
* 24: Martin Gorsky: The political economy of health care in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries
* 25: Christopher Sellers: Health, work, and environment: a Hippocratic
turn in medical history
* 26: Staffan Müller-Wille: History of science and medicine
* 27: Hilary Marland: Women, health, and medicine
* 28: Gayle Davis: Health and sexuality
* 29: Rhodri Hayward: Medicine and the mind
* 30: Andreas-Holger Maehle: Medical ethics and the law
* 31: Rob Kirk and Michael Worboys: Medicine and species: one medicine,
one history
* 32: Roberta Bivins: Histories of heterodoxy
* 33: Kate Fisher: Oral testimony and the history of medicine
* 34: Timothy Boon: Medical films and television: alternative paths to
the cultures of biomedicine