Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Medical Histories
Part I: Traditions
Chapter 2. To Whom Does Medical History Belong? Johann Moehsen, Kurt Sprengel, and the Problem of Origins in Collective Memory
Chapter 3. Charles Daremberg, His Friend Emile Littre, and Positivist Medical History
Chapter 4. Bildung in a Scientific Age: Julius Pagel, Max Neuburger, and the Cultural History of Medicine
Chapter 5. Karl Sudhoff and ''the Fall'' of German Medical History
Chapter 6. Ancient Medicine: From Berlin to Baltimore
Chapter 7. Using Medical History to Shape a Profession: The Ideals of William Osler and Henry E. Sigerist
Part II: A Generation Reviewed
Chapter 8. ''Beyond the Great Doctors'' Revisited: A Generation of the ''New'' Social History of Medicine
Chapter 9. The Historiography of Medicine in the United Kingdom
Chapter 10. Social History of Medicine in Germany and France in the Late Twentieth Century: From the History of Medicine toward a History of Health
Chapter 11. Trading Zones or Citadels? Professionalization and Intellectual Change in the History of Medicine
Chapter 12. The Power of Norms: Georges Canguilhem, Michel Foucault, and the History of Medicine
Chapter 13. Postcolonial Histories of Medicine
Part III: After the Cultural Turn
Chapter 14. ''Framing'' the End of the Social History of Medicine
Chapter 15. The Social Construction of Medical Knowledge
Chapter 16. Making Meaning from the Margins: The New Cultural History of Medicine
Chapter 17. Cultural History and Social Activism: Scholarship, Identities, and the Intersex Rights Movement
Chapter 18. Transcending the Two Cultures in Biomedicine: The History of Medicine and History in Medicine
Chapter 19. A Hippocratic Triangle: History, Clinician-Historians, and Future Doctors
Chapter 20. Medical History for the General Reader
Chapter 21. From Analysis to Advocacy: Crossing Boundaries as a Historian of Health Policy
Notes on Contributors
Index