Surgery and society in peace and war : orthopaedics and the organization of medern medicine, 1880-1948
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Surgery and society in peace and war : orthopaedics and the organization of medern medicine, 1880-1948
(Science, technology and medicine in modern history)
Macmillan in association with the Centre for the History of Science Technology and Medicine, University of Manchester, 1993
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Note
Bibliography: p. 357-373
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book illuminates how crucial transformations in medical politics and organisation were linked to wider changes in society, economy and ideology. Paying particular attention to developments in medical welfare for physically handicapped children, wounded soldiers and injured workers, this extensively documented study challenges conventional accounts of medical specialisation; provides Anglo-American comparisons; and demonstrates the importance for medical modernity of changing interactions between philanthropy, war, labour, capital and the state.
Table of Contents
List of Tables - List of Maps, Figures and Plates - Acknowledgements - List of Abbreviations - Introduction - The Medical Context of Bones - Politics and Professionalisation - The Cause of the Crippled Child - Happenings by Accident - The Great War - Industry and Labour, Part 1: Britain and America, 1920s - Colonisation Among Cripples - The Fracture Movement - Industry and Labour, Part 2: Rehabilitation and the Assault on Trauma, 1930s - The Phoney War - 'Adolescence's' End - Notes - Bibliography - Index
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