negan /f Jane /i B.
?This well-organized and scholarly monograph presents a welcome
conribution to medical history and the history of women in early
19th century America. The study focuses on hydropathy, or the
water-cure method, that promised health if followers combined
rejection of medication with a complicated hygienic routine,
wholesome diet, and exercise. One of several medical sects that
challenged orthodox medicine, hydropathy competed for clientele in
the laissez-faire climate of antebellum America. The genesis of
health reform was twofold. By its optimistic themes of self-help,
individual responsibility, and eradication of disease through
self-awareness and right-living, ' it merged with general
perfectionist and evangelist ethos that energized the early 19th
century and culminated in the great ameliorative physicians, whose
practices were mostly ineffective in curing disease, and in too
many instances actually threatened life. These years witnessed the
introduction of physicians into the birthing room (justified by
redefining pregnancy as disease); heroic methodology and operative
intervention during birth followed. Hydropathic insistence that
pregnancy and childbirth represented natural events, and
hydropathic enlistment of women physicians as better qualified to
treat women patients, contributed to the general reform of medical
practice and gives the sect a prominent place in women's history.
Recommended.?-Choice
?What distinguishes Donegan's work is her detailed elucidation of
the feminist ideology and activities of hydropaths.... Donegan's
work will be of special interest to scholars in medical, social,
and women's history.?-ISIS
"What distinguishes Donegan's work is her detailed elucidation of
the feminist ideology and activities of hydropaths.... Donegan's
work will be of special interest to scholars in medical, social,
and women's history."-ISIS
"This well-organized and scholarly monograph presents a welcome
conribution to medical history and the history of women in early
19th century America. The study focuses on hydropathy, or the
water-cure method, that promised health if followers combined
rejection of medication with a complicated hygienic routine,
wholesome diet, and exercise. One of several medical sects that
challenged orthodox medicine, hydropathy competed for clientele in
the laissez-faire climate of antebellum America. The genesis of
health reform was twofold. By its optimistic themes of self-help,
individual responsibility, and eradication of disease through
self-awareness and right-living, ' it merged with general
perfectionist and evangelist ethos that energized the early 19th
century and culminated in the great ameliorative physicians, whose
practices were mostly ineffective in curing disease, and in too
many instances actually threatened life. These years witnessed the
introduction of physicians into the birthing room (justified by
redefining pregnancy as disease); heroic methodology and operative
intervention during birth followed. Hydropathic insistence that
pregnancy and childbirth represented natural events, and
hydropathic enlistment of women physicians as better qualified to
treat women patients, contributed to the general reform of medical
practice and gives the sect a prominent place in women's history.
Recommended."-Choice
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