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Neoclassical Medicine: Transformations in the Hippocratic Medical Tradition from Galen to the Articella.Viniegra, Marco Antonio January 2013 (has links)
Neoclassical Medicine: Transformations in the / History of Science
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Men of Strong Opinions: Identity, Self-Representation, and the Performance of Neurosurgery, 1919-1950Gavrus, Delia Elena 29 February 2012 (has links)
This thesis explores the ways in which American and Canadian neurosurgeons fashioned their professional identity in the period between 1919 and 1950. This dissertation is an exploration of the ways in which American and Canadian neurosurgeons
fashioned their professional identity in the formative period of the specialty’s history. Part I argues that an ethos of elitism and exclusionism structured the cultural landscape of the specialty and was reflected in the membership policy of the Society of Neurological Surgeons and the Harvey Cushing Society, which screened for certain moral and professional values. The meetings of the societies opened with surgical performances designed to encourage particular technical
practices, to negotiate and standardize procedures, and to demonstrate the prowess of the neurosurgeon. In theatrical performances at these meetings the neurosurgeons also created a distinctive type of masculinity, which was inflected with a feminine resonance.
Part II outlines the extraordinary professional success of the neurosurgeons in the 1930s and 1940s when they assumed leadership of neurological institutes. Wilder Penfield’s effort to build such an institute in Montreal led him to challenge the authority of clinical neurologists by
claiming therapeutic superiority and by engineering a public debate about the future of these related specialties. Jurisdictional disputes between neurosurgeons and neurologists played out in animated rhetorical performances at the meetings of professional societies and illustrate the
divergent ways in which these specialists envisioned medical specialization. Neurosurgeons cleaved neurology along therapeutic lines, while neurologists, attempting to regain conditions lost to neurosurgeons and psychiatrists, sought authority over all organic and functional
disorders.
Part III charts the neurosurgeons’ growing authority in popular culture. Although popular representations testify to an increasing glamorization of brain surgeons over the first half of the twentieth century, these narratives reveal culturally contingent tensions. The ideal cure for brain
tumors was portrayed as medical, not surgical, while the public expressed an ambivalent reaction to the violence to both body and mind that brain surgery appeared to threaten.
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Men of Strong Opinions: Identity, Self-Representation, and the Performance of Neurosurgery, 1919-1950Gavrus, Delia Elena 29 February 2012 (has links)
This thesis explores the ways in which American and Canadian neurosurgeons fashioned their professional identity in the period between 1919 and 1950. This dissertation is an exploration of the ways in which American and Canadian neurosurgeons
fashioned their professional identity in the formative period of the specialty’s history. Part I argues that an ethos of elitism and exclusionism structured the cultural landscape of the specialty and was reflected in the membership policy of the Society of Neurological Surgeons and the Harvey Cushing Society, which screened for certain moral and professional values. The meetings of the societies opened with surgical performances designed to encourage particular technical
practices, to negotiate and standardize procedures, and to demonstrate the prowess of the neurosurgeon. In theatrical performances at these meetings the neurosurgeons also created a distinctive type of masculinity, which was inflected with a feminine resonance.
Part II outlines the extraordinary professional success of the neurosurgeons in the 1930s and 1940s when they assumed leadership of neurological institutes. Wilder Penfield’s effort to build such an institute in Montreal led him to challenge the authority of clinical neurologists by
claiming therapeutic superiority and by engineering a public debate about the future of these related specialties. Jurisdictional disputes between neurosurgeons and neurologists played out in animated rhetorical performances at the meetings of professional societies and illustrate the
divergent ways in which these specialists envisioned medical specialization. Neurosurgeons cleaved neurology along therapeutic lines, while neurologists, attempting to regain conditions lost to neurosurgeons and psychiatrists, sought authority over all organic and functional
disorders.
Part III charts the neurosurgeons’ growing authority in popular culture. Although popular representations testify to an increasing glamorization of brain surgeons over the first half of the twentieth century, these narratives reveal culturally contingent tensions. The ideal cure for brain
tumors was portrayed as medical, not surgical, while the public expressed an ambivalent reaction to the violence to both body and mind that brain surgery appeared to threaten.
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The conquest of disease and increasing our life span a dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment ... Master of Science in Public Health ... /Lucas, Grace E. January 1935 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.P.H.)--University of Michigan, 1935.
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The conquest of disease and increasing our life span a dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment ... Master of Science in Public Health ... /Lucas, Grace E. January 1935 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.P.H.)--University of Michigan, 1935.
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The Iris in eighteenth-century physiology /Mazzolini, Renato G. January 1900 (has links)
Diss. phil.-hist. Bern, 1979.
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Der Hopfen : seine medizinische Bedeutung von der Antike bis heute /Müller, Ingeborg, January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität, Regensburg, 2006.
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O princípio do mal: a ameaça leprosa no Rio de Janeiro colonial / The principle of evil: the leprous threat in colonial Rio de JaneiroAndrade, Marcio Magalhães January 2005 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2005 / Busca analisar as discussões em torno do mal de São Lázaro na cidade do Rio de Janeiro, entre fins do século XVII e primórdios do XIX, tendo em mira as questões médicas e político-administrativas que caracterizaram o problema. Constitui uma história sem grandes rupturas, pois nenhuma mudança na estrutura política ou nas teorias médicas trouxe maiores conseqüências para o trato da lepra e dos leprosos.
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Fazer o bem sem olhar a quem: aspectos médicos e outras possibilidades na primeira metade do século XIX no Ceará / To be kind without regard to whom: medical aspects and other possibilities in the first half of the nineteenth century in CearáVasconcelos, Eduardo Henrique Barbosa de January 2007 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2007 / Apresenta um estudo das atividades médicas na Província do Ceará na primeira metade do século XIX. Privilegiou-se a análise das ações e as conseqüências dessas atividades do final do século XVIII até meados do século XIX a partir da abordagem proporcionada pela bibliofilia relacionada à história das ciências.
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A política biológica como projeto: a eugenia negativa e a construção da nacionalidade na trajetória de Renato Kehl ( 1917-1932) / The biological policy as a project: the negative eugenics and the construction of nationality in the work of Renato Kehl (1917-1932)Souza, Vanderlei Sebastião January 2006 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2006 / Trata das idéias eugênicas no Brasil. Seu objetivo consiste em investigar a trajetória intelectual e o pensamento do médico e eugenista Renato Ferraz Kehl, entre 1917 a 1932. Analisa a um só tempo o papel desempenhado por este autor na organização do movimento eugênico brasileiro e as idéias e concepções com as quais ele e outros eugenistas nacionais se envolveram ao longo deste período.
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