Reviews
An important and highly readable life of John Burdon Sanderson... [including an] exquisitely textured account of his projects... Romano's beautifully written biography deftly integrates Burdon Sanderson and his chosen intellectual milieu.
A full-length study of this influential figure in British medical science has finally appeared... Libraries will surely want to add it to their holdings.
Romano has performed a brilliant service for medical historians... a useful entry in the canon of science and public health, this little book is an antidote to the hubris of recent claims of accomplishment.
Making Medicine Scientific is a carefully researched and written work... It enlares our view of the power-struggle for autonomy over medicine by both doctors at the bedside and scientists in the laboratory and extends the picture of the relationship between science and medicine in the late nineteenth century.
Romano treads a sensible line between an older literature which saw the rise of the science establishment within medicine as natural and positive, and a newer (equally partisan) interpretation which seeks to reduce science in nineteenth-century medicine to rhetoric and ideology.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: From Evangelical to Medical Officer of Health
Chapter 1: Choosing Medicine
Chapter 2: Medical Officer of Health
Part II: Making a Career in Medical Research
Chapter 3
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: From Evangelical to Medical Officer of Health
Chapter 1: Choosing Medicine
Chapter 2: Medical Officer of Health
Part II: Making a Career in Medical Research
Chapter 3: Before the Germ Theory: The Cattle Plague of 1865-1866 and the State Support of Pathology
Chapter 4: From Clinician-Researcher to Professional Physiologist: Making the Pulse Visible
Chapter 5: Becoming a Research Pathologist: The Rise of Laboratory Medicine in Britain
Chapter 6: Focusing on Physiology: Capturing the Venus's-Flytrap's Electrical Activity
Part II: The Medical Sciences: Critics and Allies
Chapter 7: Physicians, Anti vivisectionists, and the Failure of the Oxford School of Physiology
Chapter 8: A Corner Turned? Experimental Medicine in Late Victorian Britain
List of Abbreviations
Appendix: Researchers Associated with Burdon Sanderson in Britain
Notes
Index