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MEDIZIN Medizinhistorisches Journal 46 (2011) 333-343 HISTORISCHES © Franz Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart JOURNAL Internationale Zeitschriftenschau Archives Internationales d᾿Histoire de Science Vol. 61 (2011), No. 166: Joël Coste: Le concept de médicalisation en histoire sociale de la médecine et de la santé: une analyse épistémologique et méthodologique, S. 511-524. Free Download von der Franz Steiner Verlag eLibrary am 07.06.2022 um 11:22 Uhr Archiwum historii filozofii medycyny Vol. 74 (2011): Ryszard W. Gryglewski: Birth of a medical clinic in Poland, S. 13-17. – Ryszard W. Gryglewski: Outline of the general history of medicine by Joseph Oettinger, S. 18-28. – Andrzej Grzybowski und Jarosław Sak: The hundredth anniversary of Edmund Biernacki’s death (1866–1911) - an inventor of the erythrocyte sedimentation rate, S. 29-36. – Andrzej Grzybowski, Jarosław Sak und Jakub Pawlikowski: Józef Struś (1510–1568) as a precursor of the modern knowledge about circulation of blood in 500th anniversary of his birth, S. 37-46. – Zdzisław Jezierski: Health service in the 27 Wolyn Infantry Division of the home army, S. 47-66. – Sibylle K. Scholtz und Gerd U. Auffarth: 1911 - an ophthalmologist won the Nobel Price: Allvar Gullstrand, surgeon, mathematician and creative inventor, S. 79-84. – Evgenij Tishchenko: Public health in the east voivodeships of the Second Republic, S. 85-90. The British Journal for the History of Science Vol. 44 (2011), H. 3: Chris Renwick: From political economy to sociology: Francis Galton and the social-scientific origins of eugenics, S. 343-369. H. 4: Daniele Cozolli und Mauro Capocci: Making biomedicine in twentieth-century Italy: Domenico Marotta (1886–1974) and the Italian Higher Institute of Health, S. 549- 574. Bulletin of the History of Medicine Vol. 85 (2011), H. 3: George D. Sussman: Was the black death in India and China?, S. 319-355. – Ilana Löwy: Because of their praiseworthy modesty, they consult too late: regime of hope and cancer of the womb, 1800–1910, S. 356-383. – Martin Gorsky: Local government health services in interwar England: problems of quantification and interpretation, S. 384-412. – Guenter B. Risse: Translating western modernity: the first Chinese hospital in America, S. 413-447. Franz Steiner Verlag
334 Internationale Zeitschriftenschau Canadian Bulletin of Medical History Vol. 28 (2011), H. 2: Eileen O᾿Connor und Patricia Vertinsky: Towards a discernable history of sports medicine, S. 239-247. – Vanessa Heggie: Sport (and exercise) medicine in Britain: healthy citizens and abnormal athletes, S. 249-269. – Gertrud Pfister: „Sports“ medicine in Germany and its struggle for professional status, S. 271-292. – Shannon Jette: Exercising caution: the production of medical knowledge about physical exertion during pregnancy, S. 293-313. – Nancy B. Bouchier und Ken Cruikshank: Abandoning nature: swimming pools and clean, healthy recreation in Hamilton, Ontario, c. 1930s–1950s, S. 315-337. – James L. Rupert: Genitals to genes: the history and biology of gender verification in the Olympics, S. 339-365. – Parissa Safai: A healthy anniversary? Exploring narratives of health in media coverage of the 1968 and 2008 Olympic Games, S. 367-382. – Roberta J. Park: Historical reflections on diet, exercise, Free Download von der Franz Steiner Verlag eLibrary am 07.06.2022 um 11:22 Uhr and obesity: the recurring need to put words into action, S. 383-401. Dynamis Vol. 31 (2011), No. 2: Christoph Gradmann: Magic bullets and moving targets: antibiotic resistance and experimental chemotherapy, 1900–1940, S. 305-322. – Robert Bud: Innovators, deep fermentation and antibiotics: promoting applied science before and after the Second World War, S. 323-342. – Mauro Capocci: „A chain is gonna come“. Building a penicillin production plant in post-war Italy, S. 343-362. – Ana Romero de Pablos: Regulation and the circulation of knowledge: penicillin patents in Spain, S. 363-384. – Flurin Condrau und Robert G. W. Kirk: Negotiating hospital infections: the debate between ecological balance and eradication strategies in British hospitals, 1947–1969, S. 385-406. – María Jesús Santesmases: Screening antibiotics: industrial research by CEPA and Merck in the 1950s, S. 407-428. – José Miguel Martínez Carrión und Javier Puche Gil: The evolution of height in France and Spain, 1770–2000. Historiographic background and new evidence, S. 429-452. – Enric J. Novella: Medicine of the passions in 19th century Spain, S. 452-474. – Marion Baschin: How patients built up the practice of the lay homeopath Clemens von Bönninghausen. Quantitative and qualitative aspects of patient history, S. 475-496. – Ricardo Campos: „The duty to improve“: working-class hygiene and identity in socialism in Madrid, S. 475-526. – Rui Manuel Pinto Costa: The place of cancer in Portuguese health statistics, S. 527-552. Early Science and Medicine Vol. 16 (2011), No, 4: Ian Maclean: The logic of physiognomony in the late Renaissance, S. 275-295. – Siamak Adhami: Two Pahlavi chapters on medicine, S. 331-353. – Sachiko Kusukawa: Visualizing medieval medicine and natural history, 1200–1550, S. 354-355. – Olivia Catanorchi: Disreputable bodies: magic, medicine, and gender in Renaissance natural philosophy, S. 356-357. – Kevin Laam: Melancholy, medicine and religion in early modern England: reading the anatomy of melancholy, S. 369-371. No. 6: Alain Touwaide: Ibn Baklarish᾿s book of simples. Medical remedies between three faiths in twelfth-century Spain, S. 600-602. – Rebecca Krug: Medical writing in early modern English, S. 611-613. Franz Steiner Verlag
Internationale Zeitschriftenschau 335 Gesnerus Vol. 68 (2011), No. 1: Claire Crignon: La découverte de la circulation sanguine: révolution ou refonte?, S. 5-25. – James Kennaway: The piano plague: the nineteenth- century medical critique of female musical education, S. 26-40. – Pascal Le Maléfan: La place de l’étude des écrits dans l’approche psychopathologique du spiritisme (1850– 1950), S. 41-60. – Andreas-Holger Maehle: Doctors in court, honour, and professional ethics: two scandals in Imperial Germany, S. 61-79. – Cynthia Kraus: Am I my brain or my genitals? A nature-culture controversy in the hermaphrodite debate from the mid- 1960s to the late 1990s, S. 80-106. History of Psychiatry Vol. 22 (2011), No. 4: Enric J. Novella und Rafael Huertas: Alexandre Brierre de Free Download von der Franz Steiner Verlag eLibrary am 07.06.2022 um 11:22 Uhr Boismont and the origins of the Spanish psychiatric profession, S. 387-402. – Andrew Scull: The peculiarities of the Scots? Scottish influences on the development of English psychiatry, 1700–1980, S. 403-415. – Iain Hutchison: Institutionalization of mentally- impaired children in Scotland, c. 1855–1914, S. 416-433. – Christopher Pell: „Him biđ sona sel“: psychiatry in the Anglo-Saxon Leechbooks, S. 434-447. – Lisabeth Hock: Women and melancholy in nineteenth-century German psychiatry, S. 448-464. – Bernd Holdorff und Tom Dening: The fight for „traumatic neurosis“, 1889–1916: Hermann Oppenheim and his opponents in Berlin, S. 465-476. Vol 23 (2012), No. 1: Jonathan Andrews: Death and the dead-house in Victorian asylums: necroscopy versus mourning at the Royal Edinburgh Asylum, c. 1832–1901, S. 6-26. – Jeremy Boulton und John Black: „Those, that die by reason of their madness“: dying insane in London, 1629–1830, S. 27-39. – Pamela Michael und David Hirst: Recording the many faces of death at the Denbigh Asylum, 1848–1938, S. 40-51. – Robert Houston: Explanations for death by suicide in northern Britain during the long eighteenth century, S. 52-64. – Elizabeth T. Hurren: „Abnormalities and deformities“: the dissection and interment of the insane poor, 1832–1929, S. 65-77. – Hilary Marland: Under the shadow of maternity: birth, death and puerperal insanity in Victorian Britain, S. 78-90. – Chris Philo: Troubled proximities: asylums and cemeteries in nineteenth- century England, S. 91-103. – Cathy Smith: „Visitation by God“: rationalizing death in the Victorian asylum, S. 104-116. – Leonard Smith: Welcome release: perspectives on death in the early county lunatic asylums, 1810–50, S. 117-128. History of Science Vol. 49 (2011), No. 3: Christopher Hamlin: Bacteriology as a cultural system: analysis and its discontents, S. 269-298. – Ilana Löwy: Labelled bodies: classification of diseases and the medical way of knowing, S. 299-316. Isis Vol. 102 (2011), No. 3: Richard Bellon: Inspiration in the harness of daily labor: Darwin, botany, and the triumph of evolution, 1859–1868, S. 393-420. – Yi Doogab: Who owns what? Private ownership and the public interest in recombinant DNA technology in the 1970s, S. 446-474. Franz Steiner Verlag
336 Internationale Zeitschriftenschau No. 4: Ken Arnold und Thomas Söderqvist: Medical instruments in museums: immediate impressions and historical meanings, S. 718-729. Journal of the History of Dentistry Vol. 59 (2011), No. 2: Robert J. Rudy: An abbreviated history of osseous surgery, S. 61- 89. – James L. Gutmann: Local anesthetics, pulpal blood flow and C. Edmund Kells, S. 90-93. – Nancy K. Mann: The history of dental hygiene in South Korea, S. 94-100. No. 3: Maria Victoria Dominguez Rodriguez: Baby teething in early modern England: theory and therapeutic practice, S. 117-125. – Stefano Eramo, Livio Gallottini und Guido Migliau: Mozart: the toothache of a genius, S. 129-134. – Fermin Alberto Carranza: The great revolution of the 20th century: antimicrobial agents, S. 143-152. – Jaime Castro-Núñez: Waldemar Wilhelm: father of oral an maxillofacial surgery in Free Download von der Franz Steiner Verlag eLibrary am 07.06.2022 um 11:22 Uhr Colombia, S. 153-158. Journal of the History of Biology Vol. 44 (2011), No. 3: Robyn Braun: Accessory food factors: understanding the catalytic function, S. 483-504. – Nathan Q. Ha: The riddle of sex: biological theories of sexual difference in the early twentieth-century, S. 505-546. No. 4: Miles B. Markus: Malaria: origin of the term „hypnozoite“, S. 781-786. Vol. 45 (2012), No. 1: Bradley W. Hart: Watching the „eugenic experiment“ unfold: the mixed views of British eugenicists toward Nazi Germany in the early 1930s, S. 33- 63. – Rony Armon: Between biochemists and embryologists – the biochemical study of embryonic induction in the 1930s, S. 65-108. – Donald R. Forsdyk: Immunology (1955–1975): the Natural Selection Theory, the Two Signal Hypothesis and positive repertoire selection, S. 139-161. Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences Vol. 66 (2011), No. 4: Justin Barr: A short history of Dapsone, or an alternative model of drug development, S. 425-467. – Jeremy A. Greene: What᾿s in a name? Generics and the persistence of the pharmaceutical brand in American medicine, S. 468-506. – Penelope Gouk und Ingrid Sykes: Hearing science in mid-eighteenth-century Britain and France, S. 507-545. – Laurence Esterle und Jean-François Picard: Between clinical medicine and the laboratory: medical research funding in France from 1945 to the present, S. 546-570. Vol. 67 (2012), No. 1: Chiara Beccalossi und Peter Cryle: Recent developments in the intellectual history of medicine: a special issue of the Journal of the History of Medicine, S. 1-6. – Chiara Beccalossi: Female same-sex desires: conceptualizing a disease in competing medical fields in nineteenth-century Europe, S. 7-35. – Ivan Crozier: Making up koro: multiplicity, psychiatry, culture, and penis-shrinking anxieties, S. 36-70. – Peter Cryle: Vaginismus: a Franco-American story, S. 71-93. – Heather Wolffram: An object of vulgar curiosity: legitimizing medical hypnosis in Imperial Germany, S. 149-176. Franz Steiner Verlag
Internationale Zeitschriftenschau 337 Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences Vol. 47 (2011), No. 4: Stéphanie Dupouy: The naturalist and the nuances: sentimentalism, moral values, and emotional expression in Darwin and the anatomists, S. 335-358. – Gerald N. Grob: The attack of psychiatric legitimacy in the 1960s: rhetoric and reality, S. 389-416. Journal of the History of the Neurosciences Vol. 20 (2011), No. 4: Sharda Umanath, Daniel Sarezky und Stanley Finger: Sleepwalking through history: medicine, arts, and courts of law, S. 253-276. – D. Vassilopoulos und E. Poulakou-Rebelakou: The three last years of Manuel II Palaeologus’ reign between two stroke attacks: aphasia or not?, S. 277-283. – Jörg Jewanski, Julia Simner, Sean A. Day und Jamie Ward: The development of a Free Download von der Franz Steiner Verlag eLibrary am 07.06.2022 um 11:22 Uhr scientific understanding of synesthesia from early case studies (1849–1873), S. 284-305. – Armando De Palma und Germana Pareti: Bernstein᾿s long path to membrane theory: radical change and conservation in nineteenth-century German electrophysiology, S. 306-337. – Stephen T. Casper: One hundred members of the Association of British Neurologists: a collective biography for 1933–1960, S. 338-356. – Martin N. Raitiere: Did Herbert Spencer have reading epilepsy?, S. 357-367. Vol. 21 (2012), No. 1: Amy B. Graziano, Anja Pech, Craig Hou und Julene K. Johnson: Hermann Oppenheim᾿s observations about music in aphasia, S. 1-16. – Pawel Tacik, Alex Alfieri, Malte Kornhuber und Dirk Dressler: Gasperini᾿s Syndrome: its neuroanatomical basis now and then, S. 17-30. – Esther Lardreau: A curiosity in the history of sciences: the words „megrim“ and „migraine“, S. 31-40. Medical History Vol. 55 (2011), No. 3: Bill Luckin: The crisis, the humanities and medical history, S. 283- 287. – Roger Cooter: Re-presenting the future of medicine’s past: towards a politics of survival, S. 289-294. – Martin Edwards: Put out your tongue! The role of clinical insight in the study of the history of medicine, S. 301-306. – Joeld Howell: Coronary heart disease and heart attacks, 1912–2010, S. 307-312. – Akihito Suzuki: Smallpox and the epidemiological heritage of modern Japan: towards a total history, S. 313-318. – Sally Frampton: Patents, priority disputes and the value of credit: towards a history (and pre-history) of intellectual property in medicine, S. 319-324. – Claudia Stein: The birth of biopower in eighteenth-century Germany, S. 331-337. – Steve Ridge: „Proper motions, actions and uses“: physiological knowledge as the only means to rational politics in restoration England, S. 339-342. – Christos Lynteris: From Prussia to China: Japanese colonial medicine and Gotō Shinpei’s combination of medical police and local self-administration, S. 343-347. – Andrew Pickering: Cyborg spirituality, S. 349-353. – Robert G.W. Kirk und Neil Pemberton: Re-imagining bleeders: the medical leech in the nineteenth century bloodletting encounter, S. 355-360. – Edmund Ramsden: Model organisms and model environments: a rodent laboratory in science, medicine and society, S. 365-368. – Fabio de Sio: Leviathan and the soft animal: medical humanism and the invertebrate models for higher nervous functions, 1950s–90s, S. 369-374. – Sarah Chaney: Self-control, selfishness and mutilation: how „medical“ is self-injury, Franz Steiner Verlag
338 Internationale Zeitschriftenschau S. 375-382. – Andreas Sommer: Professional heresy: Edmund Gurney (1847–88) and the study of hallucinations and hypnotism, S. 383–388. – Åsa Jansson: Mood disorders and the brain: depression, melancholia, and the historiography of psychiatry, S. 393- 399. – Andrew Scull: Contested jurisdictions: psychiatry, psychoanalysis, and clinical psychology in the United States, 1940–2010, S. 401-406. – Alessandro Aruta: Shocking waves at the museum: the Bini–Cerletti electro-shock apparatus, S. 407-412. – Jeffrey S. Reznick: Perspectives from the history of medicine division of the United States National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, S. 413-418. – Angharad Fletcher: Sisters behind the wire: reappraising Australian military nursing and internment in the Pacific during World War II, S. 419-424. No. 4: Peter Anstey: The creation of the English Hippocrates, S. 457-478. – Ingrid Sykes: Sounding the „citizen–patient“: the politics of voice at the Hospice des Quinze- Free Download von der Franz Steiner Verlag eLibrary am 07.06.2022 um 11:22 Uhr Vingts in post-revolutionary Paris, S. 479-502. – Susan Heydon: Medicines, travellers and the introduction and spread of „modern“ medicine in the Mt. Everest region of Nepal, S. 503-521. – Hubert Steinke und Yves Lang: Parochialism or self-consciousness? Internationality in medical history journals 1997–2006, S. 523-538. Vol. 56 (2012), No. 1: Abdul Haq Compier: Rhazes in the Renaissance of Andreas Vesalius, S. 3-25. – Aaron Mauck: „By merit raised to that bad eminence“: Christopher Merrett, artisanal knowledge, and professional reform in Restoration London, S. 26- 47. – Julia Neville: Explaining local authority choices on public hospital provision in the 1930s: a public policy hypothesis, S. 48-71. – John T. Macfarlane und Michael Worboys: Showers, sweating and suing: Legionnaires᾿ disease and „new“ infections in Britain, 1977–90, S. 72-93. Medicina nei secoli* Vol. 22 (2010), No. 1-3: Alessandro Aruta: Shocking waves at the museum: the Bini- Cerletti electroshock apparatus, S. 11-24. – Lawrence J. Bliquez: Gynecological surgery from the Hippocratics to the fall of the Roman Empire, S. 25-64. – Vito Cagli: Medicine in the Hellenistic age, S. 65-86. – Mauro Capocci: The historical roots of regeneration research, S. 87-110. – Paola Catalano und Carla Caldarini: Health status and life style in Castel Malnome (Rome, I-II cent. A. D.), S. 111-128. – Rosalba Ciranni: Andreas Vesalius in Pisa, S. 143-161. – Maria Conforti: The ignuda morte of Ruysch mummie: bodily knowledge and poetics in Giacomo Leopardi, S. 163-180. – Gilberto Corbellni: Specificity in microbiology and immunochemistry between 1880 and 1930, S. 191-246. – Elio de Angelis: Between medical foretelling and clues᾿ paradigm: the splendor of Gerolamo Cardan, S. 247-260. – Gino Fornaciari, Valentina Giuffra und Raffaella Bianucci: Identification of pathogens in ancient skeletal series: the malaria of the Medici grand dukes (Florence, XVI century), S. 261-272. – Raffaella Bianuccii, Stefan Tzortzis, Gino Fornaciari und Michel Signoli: Historical and biological approaches to the study of modern age French plague mass burials, S. 273-295. – Stefania Fortuna: Galen and medioeval translations: the De purgantium medicamentorum facultate, S. 297-341. – Valentina Gazzaniga: Anomalous pregnancies in ancient medicine, S. 343-360. – Matteo Gulino, Caterina Bassetti und Paola Frati: The key role of mediation in the medical malpractice litigation, S. 377-391. – Alberto Jori: Matteo Borsa (1751–1798) and his „Hippocratic“ reform of medicine, S. 419-464. – Giorgio Franz Steiner Verlag
Internationale Zeitschriftenschau 339 Maggioni und Livia Maggioni: The Dateus founding home in Milan: questionable date of establishment, S. 479-487. – Renato Malta: Zolfare in Sicily: a research survey, S. 489-507. – Marie Hélène Marganne: The „medical library“ of Photios, S. 509-529. – Silvia Marinozzi: Ageing in the early modern age, S. 531-552. – Paolo Mazzarello: From Bulgaria to Italy: the „Bulgarian cure“ of encephalitis lethargic, S. 553-584. – Innocenzo Mazzini: Conception and embryonic development between poetry and medical science: Dracontius, S. 585-592. – Daniela Mugnai: N. Leonicenus interpretes of Galen on causa coniuncta, S. 593-610. – Laura Ottini und Mario Falchetti: When history meets molecular medicine: molecular history of human tuberculosis, S. 611-632. – Loris Premuda: The origins of the obstetrical teaching between Venezia and Padova, S. 685-689. – Carla Serarcangeli: Two hospitals in Rome between the church and the state: Policlinico Umberto I and Addolorata, S. 691-709. Free Download von der Franz Steiner Verlag eLibrary am 07.06.2022 um 11:22 Uhr Vol. 23 (2011), No. 1: Emanuela Prinzivalli: Female anthropology, physiology and disease in ancient Christian writers, S. 205-226. No. 2: Francesco Carnevale: Introduction. The immediate and long term fortune of De morbis artificum diatriba (1700–1713) by Bernardino Ramazzini, S. 385-410. – Alessandro Porro, Antonia Francesca Franchini und Bruno Falconi: Disinfection in Milan at the beginning of XXth century, S. 495-509. – Silvia Marinozzi, Maria Conforti und Valentina Gazzaniga: Neo-„Hippocratism“ in Bernardino Ramazzini, S. 465-493. – Fabriziomaria Gobba, Alberto Modenese und Vincenzo Occhionero: Bernardino Ramazzini᾿s intuitions and modern occupational medicine, S. 443-63. – Guiliano Franco: Bernardino Ramazzini and the new epidemics of work-related disorders, S. 425-441. – Berenice Cavarra: Philosophy and science in the work of Bernardino Ramazzini, S. 411-423. – Maurizio Rippa Bonati und Fabio Zampieri: For a socio-medical iconography of Ramazzini᾿s De Morbis: the manuscript of Giovanni Grevembroch (1731–1807), S. 541-565. – Elio Tavilla: The University of Modena during Bernardino Ramazzini᾿s teaching, S. 527-540. – Michele Augusto Riva, Vittorio Alessandro Sironi und Giancarlo Cesana: The eclecticism in Bernardino Ramazzini: the analysis of non-medical sources of „De morbis artificum diatriba“, S. 511-526. *mit Summary NTM Vol. 19 (2011), H. 3: Michael Martin und Heiner Fangerau: Seeing sounds? The visualization of acoustic phenomena in heart diagnostics, S. 299-327. H. 4: Florence Bretelle-Establet: The construction of the medical writer’s authority and legitimacy in late Imperial China through authorial and allographic prefaces, S. 349-390. Social History of Medicine Vol. 24 (2011), No. 2: John Slater und María Luz López Terrada: Scenes of mediation: staging medicine in the Spanish interludes, S. 244-259. − Gill Newton: Infant mortality variations, feeding practices and social status in London between 1550 and 1750, S. 260- 280. − Russell Noyes: The transformation of hypochondriasis in British medicine, 1680– 1830, S. 281-298. − Zipora Shehory-Rubin: Jewish midwives in Eretz Israel during the Franz Steiner Verlag
340 Internationale Zeitschriftenschau late Ottoman period, 1850–1918, S. 299-315. − Philippa Martyr: „Behaving wildly“: diagnoses of lunacy among indigenous persons in western Australia, 1870–1914, S. 316-333. − Avi Sharma: Medicine from the margins? Naturheilkunde from medical heterodoxy to the University of Berlin, 1889–1920, S. 334-351. − Emma L. Jones: The establishment of voluntary family planning clinics in Liverpool and Bradford, 1926–1960: a comparative study, S. 352-369. − Alison Nuttall: Maternity charities, the Edinburgh maternity scheme and the medicalisation of childbirth, 1900–1925, S. 370- 388. − Angela Davis: A revolution in maternity care? Women and the maternity services, Oxfordshire c. 1948–1974, S. 389-406. − Susan Kelly: Education of tubercular children in northern Ireland, 1921 to 1955, S. 407–425. − Peter Hobbins: „Immunisation is as popular as a death adder“: the Bundaberg tragedy and the politics of medical science in interwar Australia, S. 426-444. − Seamus Mac Suibhne und Brendan D. Kelly: Vampirism as mental illness: myth, madness and the loss of meaning in psychiatry, Free Download von der Franz Steiner Verlag eLibrary am 07.06.2022 um 11:22 Uhr S. 445-460. − David Adams: Artificial kidneys and the emergence of bioethics: the history of „outsiders“ in the allocation of haemodialysis, S. 461-477. No. 3: Angela Montford: „Brothers who have studied medicine“: Dominican friars in thirteenth-century Paris, S. 535-553. − Celeste Chamberland: Partners and practitioners: women and the management of surgical households in London, 1570–1640, S. 554-569. − Jane Stevens Crawshaw: The beasts of burial: Pizzigamorti and public health for the plague in early modern Venice, S. 570-587. − Barry Kennerk: In danger and distress: presentation of gunshot cases to Dublin hospitals during the height of Fenianism, 1866– 1871, S. 588-607. − Claire Brock: Surgical controversy at the New Hospital for Women, 1872–1892, S. 608-623. − Katherine Foxhall: Fever, immigration and quarantine in New South Wales, 1837–1840, S. 624-642. − Bernard Harris, Martin Gorsky, Aravinda Guntupalli und Andrew Hinde: Ageing, sickness and health in England and Wales during the mortality transition, S. 643-665. − Suzannah Biernoff: The rhetoric of disfigurement in First World War Britain, S. 666-687. − Stephen Snelders und Toine Pieters: Speed in the Third Reich: metamphetamine (Pervitin) use and a drug history from below, S. 686-699. – Leela Sami: Starvation, disease and death: explaining famine mortality in Madras 1876–1878, S. 700-719. − Projit Mukharji: Lokman, Chholeman and Manik Pir: multiple frames of institutionalising Islamic medicine in modern Bengal, S. 720-738. − Steve Sturdy: Looking for trouble: medical science and clinical practice in the historiography of modern medicine, S. 739-757. − Morten Hammerborg: The laboratory and the clinic revisited: the introduction of laboratory medicine into the Bergen General Hospital, Norway, S. 758-775. − Rosemary Wall: Using bacteriology in elite hospital practice: London and Cambridge, 1880–1920, S. 776-795. Vol. 25 (2012), No. 1: Jennifer Evans: „Gentle purges corrected with hot spices, whether they work or not, do vehemently provoke venery“: menstrual provocation and procreation in early modern England, S. 2-19. − Patrick Wallis: Exotic drugs and English medicine: England᾿s drug trade, c. 1550–c. 1800, S. 20-46. − Yvonne Petry: „Many things surpass our knowledge“: an early modern surgeon on magic, witchcraft and demonic possession, S. 47-64. − Geertje Mak: Hermaphrodites on show. The case of Katharina/ Karl Hohmann and its use in nineteenth-century medical science, S. 65- 83. − Esyllt Jones: Nothing too good for the people: local labour and London’s interwar health centre movement, S. 84-102. − Jacob Mikanowski: Dr. Hirszfeld᾿s war: tropical Franz Steiner Verlag
Internationale Zeitschriftenschau 341 medicine and the invention of sero-anthropology on the Macedonian front, S. 103-121. − Ondine Godtschalk: A picture of health? New Zealand-made health education films 1952–1962, S. 122-138. − Greta Jones: „A mysterious discrimination“: Irish medical emigration to the United States in the 1950s, S. 139-156. − Carsten Timmermann: Appropriating risk factors: the reception of an American approach to chronic disease in the two German states, c. 1950–1990, S. 157-174. − John Welshman: Time, money and social science: the British birth cohort surveys of 1946 and 1958, S. 175-192. − Duncan Wilson: Who guards the guardians? Ian Kennedy, bioethics and the „ideology of accountability“ in British medicine, S. 193-211. − Helen King: History without historians? Medical history and the Internet, S. 212-221. Studies in history and philosophy of biological and biomedical sciences Free Download von der Franz Steiner Verlag eLibrary am 07.06.2022 um 11:22 Uhr Vol. 42 (2011), H. 4: Sabine Brauckmann: Cultures of seeing embryos and cells in 3-dimensions and flatness, S. 365-367. – Sabine Brauckmann: Axes, planes and tubes, or the geometry of embryogenesis, S. 381-390. − Toine Pieters und Stephen Snelders: Standardizing psychotropic drugs and drug practices in the twentieth century: paradox of order and disorder, S. 412-414. − David Herzberg: Blockbusters and controlled substances: Miltown, Quaalude, and consumer demand for drugs in postwar America, S. 415-426. − Allan V. Horwitz: Naming the problem that has no name: creating targets for standardized drugs, S. 427-433. − Nicolas Henckes: Reshaping chronicity: neuroleptics and changing meanings of therapy in French psychiatry, 1950–1975, S. 434-442. − Toine Pieters und Benoît Majerus: The introduction of chlorpromazine in Belgium and the Netherlands (1951–1968); tango between old and new treatment features, S. 443-452. − Viola Balz und Matthias Hoheisel: East-Side story: the standardisation of psychotropic drugs at the Charité Psychiatric Clinic, 1955–1970, S. 453-466. − Laura Kelly: Anatomy dissections and student experience at Irish universities, c.1900s–1960s, S. 467-474. Vol. 43 (2012), No. 1: Peter Keating und Alberto Cambrosio: Too many numbers: microarrays in clinical cancer research, S. 37-51. − Tudor M. Baetu: Genes after the human genome project, S. 191-201. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Vol. 43 (2012), No. 1: Palmira Fontes da Costa: Geographical expansion and the reconfiguration of medical authority: Garcia de Orta’s colloquies on the simples and drugs of India (1563), S. 74-81. Studium Vol. 3 (2010), No. 3: Joost Vijselaar und Ruud Abma: Psychiatrie in meervoud. De wetenschappelijke oriëntaties van de Nederlandse psychiatrie in het interbellum (1918– 1940), S. 79-81. − Timo Bolt: De pendel, de kloof en de kliniek. Leendert Bouman (1869–1936) en de „psychologische wending“ in de Nederlandse psychiatrie, S. 82-98. − Ingrid Kloosterman: Als clinicus over de grenzen van de psychiatrie. De verwantschap tussen literatuur en wetenschap in het werk van de psychiater H.C. Rümke (1893–1967), S. 99-114. − Bart Karstens: De mens in zijn totaliteit. De antropologische benadering in het werk van Lammert van der Horst (1893–1978), S. 115-129. Franz Steiner Verlag
342 Internationale Zeitschriftenschau No. 4: Arjo Roersch van der Hoogte und Toine Pieters: Advertenties voor hypnotica en sedativa in het Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde, 1900–1940: historische veranderingen in de vorm en inhoud van een informatiebron voor artsen, S. 139-154. − Pim Huijnen: Het wondermiddel van professor Buytendijk. Het vitaminepreparaat Eviunis en de risico’s van wetenschappelijke voorspraak, S. 155-169. Sudhoffs Archiv* Vol. 95 (2011), H. 2: Markham J. Geller: Zur Rolle der antiken Astrologie in der Vorbereitung einer säkularen Naturwissenschaft und Medizin, S. 158-169. − Claus Priesner: Der zu vielen Wissenschaften anweisende curiöse Künstler. Alchemie, Volksmagie und Volksmedizin in barocken Hausbüchern, S. 170-208. − Ortrun Riha: „Weil der Maulwurf sich manchmal zeigt“. Argumentationsstrukturen in Hildegards von Free Download von der Franz Steiner Verlag eLibrary am 07.06.2022 um 11:22 Uhr Bingen „Causae et curae“, S. 222-234. *mit Summary Würzburger medizinhistorische Mitteilungen* Bd. 30 (2011): Verena Abraham: Der dänische Chirurg Erik Amdrup (1923–1998). Schriftstellerarzt und gastroenterologischer Forscher, S. 8-64. – Martina Giese: Der Moamin und seine italienische Übersetzung unter dem Titel Morando falconer, De la Generatione deli Oselli de Rapina, S. 65-96. – Jochen Haas: Berufsbezeichnung und Eigenname – onomastische Erwägungen zur frühchristlichen Inschrift der Sarmanna medica aus Gondorf an der Untermosel, S. 97-122. – Volker Klimpel: Zur Bauhausarchitektur sächsischer Krankenhäuser, S. 123-138. – Ekkehardt Kumbier und Kathleen Haack: Sozialistische Hochschulpolitik zwischen Anspruch und Wirklichkeit – Das Beispiel Hans Heygster an der Universitäts-Nervenklinik Rostock, S. 139-162. – Florian Mildenberger: Auf verlorenem Posten – der einsame Kampf des Heinrich Dreuw gegen Syphilis und Salvarsan, S. 163-203. – Ferdinand Peter Moog: Kannibalismus im alten Gallien? Der Keltenfürst Critognatus im Brennpunkt der Propaganda Caesars, S. 204-227. – Georgios Papadopouplos: Die wunderbaren Wirkungen von Allheilmitteln: Vorstellungen zwischen Antike und Früher Neuzeit, S. 228-245. – Peer Pasternack: Akademische Medizin in der SBZ, DDR und Ostdeutschland. Annotierte Bibliographie für den Erscheinungszeitraum 2001–2010 incl. Nachträge für 1990–2000, S. 246-286. – Helmut Priewer und Mathias Priewer: Periodisch auftretende Pockenausbrüche in zwei Kommunen im Westerwald im 18. Jahrhundert, S. 287-309. – Ruth Schilling: Stadt und Arzt im 18. Jahrhundert. Johann Friedrich Glaser, Stadtphysicus in Suhl, S. 310-333. – Susan Splinter: „Ein jeder der Stadt Nürnberg bestelter Medicus und Physicus ordinarius soll geloben ... “. Medizinale Strukturen Nürnbergs zu Beginn des 18. Jahrhunderts, S. 334-349. – Frank W. Stahnisch: Experimentalstrategien und Teleologie des Lebendigen in unterschiedlichen Kontexten – Physiologische Forschung bei Xavier Bichat (1771–1802) und François Magendie (1783–1855), S. 350-385. – Manfred Vasold: Die Grippepandemie von 1782, unter besonderer Berücksichtigung ihres Verlaufs in der Reichsstadt Nürnberg, S. 386-417. *mit Summary Franz Steiner Verlag
Internationale Zeitschriftenschau 343 Bearbeitung: Leila Al-Deri Dr. phil. Monika Reininger Institut für Geschichte der Medizin der Universität Würzburg Oberer Neubergweg 10a D-97074 Würzburg E-Mail: gesch.med@mail.uni-wuerzburg.de Free Download von der Franz Steiner Verlag eLibrary am 07.06.2022 um 11:22 Uhr Franz Steiner Verlag
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