'Performing Medicine' is a work of sophisticated research which presents a convincing account of the irrevocable changes to the cultures, values and meanings of medicine which occurred between 1760 and 1850
Stephanie Snow, Reviews in History, 29/03/2012
'Performing Medicine tells a surprisingly colourful tale economically and readably. It is a well-written book that illuminates many aspects of the social and cultural history of the greater transformation to which it was related. I recommend it.'
David Rollison, Metascience
'Performing Medicine is a theoretically sophisticated, carefully researched, and engagingly written account of medical culture and identity in provincial England from circa 1760 to 1850 ...Performing Medicine is an excellent addition to our knowledge of the making of modern medicine.'
James Hanley, H-Albion, February 2013
Introduction
1. The Doctor's Club: politeness, sociability and the culture of medico-gentility
2. Polite and ornamental knowledge: medicine and the world of letters
3. The asylum revolution: politics, reform and the demise of medico-gentility
4. The march of intellect: social progressivism and the transformation of provincial medicine
5. Guardians of health: cholera, collectivity and the care of the social body
6. True heroes and healers: expertise, authority and the making of medical dominion
Epilogue: Pasts, present, futures
Bibliography
Index