Description
In many ways, the nineteenth century is the century in which the English medical profession can be said to have been ‘made’. From individualised practitioners catering to the corporeal needs of the rich, doctors came increasingly to think of themselves as public servants dedicated to the preservation of the health of the nation as a whole. This transformation was not a smooth one, however. Rather it was borne from intense and bitter conflict between established physicians and a newer breed of ‘general practitioners’ and it brought into question the authority, and very identity, of the Royal College of Physicians. Neither was it a process that took place in isolation; the medical profession, and its attendant values, were shaped by a variety of social forces including Britain’s new found status as a military and imperial power. This lecture will explore these varied dimensions to paint a rich picture of how the medical man of the century came to be who he was.Estimated audience numbers (if applicable)
100Period | 10 Jul 2018 |
---|
Documents & Links
Related content
-
Research output
-
Quintessentially Modern Heroes: Surgeons, Explorers and Empire, c.1840-1914
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
-
Medicine and Authority
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › peer-review
-
Medicine, Reform and the 'End' of Charity in Early Nineteenth-Century England
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article
-
Performing Medicine: Medical Culture and Identity in Provincial England, c.1760-c.1850
Research output: Book/Report › Book
-
'Bats, Rats and Barristers': The Lancet, libel and the radical stylistics of early nineteenth-century English medicine
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article
-
"Like a Devoted Army": Medicine, Heroic Masculinity, and the Military Paradigm in Victorian Britain
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article
-
Projects
-
Surgery & Emotion
Project: Research