Medical histories of Belgium
New narratives on health, care and citizenship in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
Collection
WellcomeLanguage
EnglishAbstract
This edited volume offers the first comprehensive historical overview of the Belgian medical field in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Its chapters develop narratives that go beyond traditional representations of medicine in national overviews, which have focused mostly on stateprofession interactions. Instead, the chapters bring more complex histories of health, care and citizenship. These new histories explore the relation between medicine and a variety of sociopolitical and cultural views and realities, treating themes such as gender, religion, disability, media, colonialism, education and social activism. The novelty of the book lies in its thorough attention to the (too often little studied) second half of the twentieth century and to the multiplicity of actors, places and media involved in the medical field. In assembling a variety of new scholarship, the book also makes a contribution to ‘decentring’ the European historiography of medicine by adding the perspective of a particular country Belgium to the literature.
Keywords
Belgium; medical history; religious congregations; care; cure; circulation of knowledge; pillarisation; social control; gender; history from belowISBN
9781526151087, 9781526151070Publisher
Manchester University PressPublisher website
https://manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/Publication date and place
Manchester, 2021Grantor
Classification
History of medicine
Belgium
Social and cultural history