Medical Liberty: Drugless Healers Confront Allopathic Doctors, 1910–1931 [Book Review]

Journal of Medical Humanities 29 (4):205-230 (2008)
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Abstract

Education, medicine and psychotherapeutics offer exemplary sites through which liberty and its dreams are realized. This article explores the social history of medical freedom and liberty in North America during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The National League for Medical Freedom (NLMF) and the American Medical Liberty League (AMLL) offered fierce resistance to allopathic power. Allopatic liberties and rights to medical practice in asylums, clinics, courts, hospitals, prisons and schools were never certain. The politics of these liberties and rights represents a fascinating story that neither intellectual nor social historians have fully appreciated

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Governmentality, Critical Scholarship, and the Medical Humanities.Alan Petersen - 2003 - Journal of Medical Humanities 24 (3-4):187-201.
The history of medicine according to Foucault.François Delaporte - 1994 - In Jan Goldstein (ed.), Foucault and the writing of history. Cambridge, Mass., USA: Blackwell. pp. 1--7.

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