, Brepols - Harvey Miller, 2025 Hardback, 180 Pages, Size:178 x 254 mm, Language(s):English, French, *new. ISBN 9782503601298.
Smallpox (known as "variole" or "petite v role" in French) spread relentlessly across Europe during the eighteenth century, gaining an unprecedented and deadly momentum. While there was no cure for this highly infectious and often fatal disease, those that recovered from it were immune to future infections. This phenomenon was the origin of a practice of inoculation, whereby infectious material was introduced into the body to induce immunity. In Europe, this practice was initially experimented with in England, and it was subsequently adopted across the continent during the eighteenth century. Inoculation was, however, not without controversy?not least because the practice originated outside of Europe?and it became the subject of intense debate. This debate, this volume argues, extended beyond medical circles to include intellectuals and the broader public?a phenomenon driven by a growing periodical press. As books, scientific treatises, and plays crossed regional and national boundaries, debates on inoculation must, this volume shows, be examined within a European, transnational perspective, thereby considering how ideas were shaped by adaptation, translations, and citation. Doing so, this volume not only sheds new light on the history inoculation as a practice, but also illustrates how cultural history can enrich history of medicine TABLE OF CONTENTS Yasmine Marcil, Introduction. Inoculation and its Debates in Europe Huiyi Wu, D battre de l'inoculation depuis la Chine. Le rapport du P re Dentrecolles, P kin, 1726 Yasmine Marcil, Les d bats publics sur l'inoculation en France. Une mise en question des Lumi res? Giacomo Lorandi, Le d bat sur l'inoculation dans la Conf d ration hel vtique au XVIII me si cle Andrea Rusnock, ?It Now Only Rarely Fails of Success?. Smallpox Inoculation In Late-Eighteenth-Century Britain Elina Maaniitty & Charlotta Wolff, Smallpox Inoculation in Eighteenth-Century Scandinavia. From Pioneering Work Towards Public Consensus Olga Valkova, Introducing Variolation to the Russian Public Before and After the Experiment of Catherine the Great Maria Conforti, Italian Variolation Narratives. Historians, Exoticism, and Practitioners Elena Serrano, Smallpox Inoculation in the Hispanic World and the Circulation of Knowledge. Some Reflections