Publication | Open Access
The historiography of nonconventional medicine in Germany: A concise overview
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Citations
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References
1999
Year
Quite a number of nonconventional forms of healing originated in eighteenth-and nineteenth-century Germany (e.g., mesmerism, homoeopathy, hydropathy, anthroposophical medicine). This historical fact provides more than just an excuse for pursuing the historiography of nonconventional medical practices in German-speaking countries. It provides, too, a useful basis for a comparative look at this phenomenon, challenging the traditional view that "regular medicine and fringe medicine have had their own autonomous histories".1 Although recent medical history has preferred to look at structures, agents, trends and developments in biomedicine, in the last decades nonconventional medical views and practices have also found their historians, especially among scholars concerned with social history and the history of ideas.2 Irrespective of the methodological approaches adopted, there can be no doubt about the expansion of the interest in the history of nonconventional medicine in Germany since the 1980s. However, there are already some earlier histories of noncoventional medicine, either of branches which are no longer widely available (mesmerism, exorcism) or of unorthodox therapies which have in the meantime developed into popular and well established health belief systems (e.g., hydrotherapy).3
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