Recent interest in our current information age has provided scholars in a wide range of disciplines with increasing impetus to study the origins and development of a variety of forms of printed and non-printed media. This article addresses the rise of a largely neglected but significant non-literary form of print within the medical trade between 1750 and 1914: the mail-order catalog. It focuses on the development of the physical form of the publication – from attractive book of display to commercial mail-order catalog – to highlight economic, technological and professional changes within and beyond the field of medicine. As a result of such changes, catalogs became an increasingly important technology of medical information used by medical ...
In 1909, the British Medical Association published an exposé of the patent medicine trade, Secret Re...
By drawing on a comprehensive bibliographic census (ISTC) this article offers a mapping of printed m...
This article provides a much needed commercial perspective to the gradual growth in consumption of b...
Recent interest in our current information age has provided scholars in a wide range of disciplines ...
This article explores how medical practitioners read, used, and experienced medical trade catalogs i...
The special issue "Fitting for Health" offers a critical inquiry into the co-construction of medicin...
This paper studies the rising use of commercial medical assistance in early modern England. We measu...
This article explores the interplay between the medical marketplace and print culture in the sevente...
Background: Harold Jeghers, a well-known medical educator of the twentieth century, maintained a pri...
This is the final version. Available from Johns Hopkins University Press via the DOI in this records...
This is the author's PDF version of a book chapter published by Oak Knoll Press & The British Librar...
This article discusses the history of medical advertising and the fact that "trade cards" for the pr...
Nineteenth-century medicine is characterised by rapid technological change, new methods of diagnosti...
Patent medicines were a major constituent of the healthcare of late Georgian England, but their posi...
This collection of essays discusses the marketing of scientific and medical instruments from the eig...
In 1909, the British Medical Association published an exposé of the patent medicine trade, Secret Re...
By drawing on a comprehensive bibliographic census (ISTC) this article offers a mapping of printed m...
This article provides a much needed commercial perspective to the gradual growth in consumption of b...
Recent interest in our current information age has provided scholars in a wide range of disciplines ...
This article explores how medical practitioners read, used, and experienced medical trade catalogs i...
The special issue "Fitting for Health" offers a critical inquiry into the co-construction of medicin...
This paper studies the rising use of commercial medical assistance in early modern England. We measu...
This article explores the interplay between the medical marketplace and print culture in the sevente...
Background: Harold Jeghers, a well-known medical educator of the twentieth century, maintained a pri...
This is the final version. Available from Johns Hopkins University Press via the DOI in this records...
This is the author's PDF version of a book chapter published by Oak Knoll Press & The British Librar...
This article discusses the history of medical advertising and the fact that "trade cards" for the pr...
Nineteenth-century medicine is characterised by rapid technological change, new methods of diagnosti...
Patent medicines were a major constituent of the healthcare of late Georgian England, but their posi...
This collection of essays discusses the marketing of scientific and medical instruments from the eig...
In 1909, the British Medical Association published an exposé of the patent medicine trade, Secret Re...
By drawing on a comprehensive bibliographic census (ISTC) this article offers a mapping of printed m...
This article provides a much needed commercial perspective to the gradual growth in consumption of b...