abstract: In the preface to his 1852 Dictionary of Domestic Medicine and Household Surgery, Spencer Thompson wrote: "But health will fail, either in old or young, and accidents will happen, in spite of the most careful precaution." With this concise statement, Thompson summarized the universal human desire to combat illness, injury, and hurt with action and knowledge. The more efficient ability to spread ideas and technology in nineteenth-century Britain led to increased production and use of home remedy books. Although women traditionally represented the agents of remedy and care within the domestic sphere (centuries prior to the nineteenth century), a struggle between the supposed inherent nurturing capabilities of womanhood and the profe...
In the second half of the nineteenth century, significant changes in surgery coincided with the entr...
The first major study of the relationship between Scottish Romanticism and medical culture. In the e...
Edited by Kathleen Hardesty Doig and Felicia Berger Sturzer. Includes a chapter by College at Brockp...
This article explores domestic practices of hydropathy in Britain, suggesting that these formed a ma...
Research into how men and women participated in domestic medicine, or medicine in the home, has typi...
Domestic medicine can be defined as medical treatment provided within the home or community that is ...
When one examines the recipe books of Early Modern Europe, it is not a challenge to find a plethora ...
This thesis explores household healthcare in the later seventeenth century, particularly the extent ...
This dissertation examines the history of the idea that books can serve as medicine. Focusing on the...
A number of Victorian intellectuals who suffered from symptoms of nervous strain and anxiety made at...
Women have traditionally been expected to tend the sick as part of their domestic duties; yet throug...
This thesis discusses Jane Austen’s medical knowledge and shows that the representations of health a...
This thesis examines Scottish domestic medicine in the century between 1650 and 1750. Much has been ...
Collecting recipes was an established tradition that continued in elite English households throughou...
This thesis examines the provision of medicine within the early modern domestic sphere, focusing on ...
In the second half of the nineteenth century, significant changes in surgery coincided with the entr...
The first major study of the relationship between Scottish Romanticism and medical culture. In the e...
Edited by Kathleen Hardesty Doig and Felicia Berger Sturzer. Includes a chapter by College at Brockp...
This article explores domestic practices of hydropathy in Britain, suggesting that these formed a ma...
Research into how men and women participated in domestic medicine, or medicine in the home, has typi...
Domestic medicine can be defined as medical treatment provided within the home or community that is ...
When one examines the recipe books of Early Modern Europe, it is not a challenge to find a plethora ...
This thesis explores household healthcare in the later seventeenth century, particularly the extent ...
This dissertation examines the history of the idea that books can serve as medicine. Focusing on the...
A number of Victorian intellectuals who suffered from symptoms of nervous strain and anxiety made at...
Women have traditionally been expected to tend the sick as part of their domestic duties; yet throug...
This thesis discusses Jane Austen’s medical knowledge and shows that the representations of health a...
This thesis examines Scottish domestic medicine in the century between 1650 and 1750. Much has been ...
Collecting recipes was an established tradition that continued in elite English households throughou...
This thesis examines the provision of medicine within the early modern domestic sphere, focusing on ...
In the second half of the nineteenth century, significant changes in surgery coincided with the entr...
The first major study of the relationship between Scottish Romanticism and medical culture. In the e...
Edited by Kathleen Hardesty Doig and Felicia Berger Sturzer. Includes a chapter by College at Brockp...