Kapitel
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V. Who Belongs to the Healthy Body of the Nation? Health and National Integration in Poland and the Polish Army after the First World War
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Katrin Steffen
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Table of Contents v
- List of Figures vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction. From the Midwife’s Bag to the Patient’s File: Public Health in Eastern Europe 1
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I. Medical Agents and Modern State Building
- I. Moving Backward Toward Modernity: The Role of the Medical Council in the Organization of Public Health in Greece, 1834–1924 25
- II. Creating the “Railway Population”: Public Health and Statistics in Late Imperial Russia 51
- III. Troubling Borders: The Ambivalence of Medical Modernization in the Prussian Province of Posen 73
- IV. The Material Side of Modernity: The Midwife’s Bag in Bosnia and Herzegovina around the Turn of the Century 97
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II. Public Health After Europe’s World Wars
- V. Who Belongs to the Healthy Body of the Nation? Health and National Integration in Poland and the Polish Army after the First World War 117
- VI. Transatlantic Humanitarianism: Jewish Child Relief in Budapest after the Great War 145
- VII. The Bodily Disabled as a Poster Boy-Veteran: War Invalids in the Soviet Union after the Second World War 173
- VIII. Afflicted Heroes: The Rise and Fall of Yugoslav War Neurosis after the Second World War 195
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III. Regulating Societies After 1945: State-Socialist Policies and Legacies
- IX. Politics and Family Conflicts through the Psychiatric Lens: East Berlin’s Charité in the early GDR 217
- X. Turning Women into Alcoholics: The Politics of Alcohol in Late Socialist Czechoslovakia 243
- XI. “The Gypsy Population Is Constantly Growing”: Roma and the Politics of Reproduction in Cold War Hungary 263
- XII. Underimplementing the Law: Social Work, Bureaucratic Error, and the Politics of Distribution in Postsocialist Serbia 293
- Collective Bibliography 315
- List of Contributors 335
- Index 339
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Table of Contents v
- List of Figures vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction. From the Midwife’s Bag to the Patient’s File: Public Health in Eastern Europe 1
-
I. Medical Agents and Modern State Building
- I. Moving Backward Toward Modernity: The Role of the Medical Council in the Organization of Public Health in Greece, 1834–1924 25
- II. Creating the “Railway Population”: Public Health and Statistics in Late Imperial Russia 51
- III. Troubling Borders: The Ambivalence of Medical Modernization in the Prussian Province of Posen 73
- IV. The Material Side of Modernity: The Midwife’s Bag in Bosnia and Herzegovina around the Turn of the Century 97
-
II. Public Health After Europe’s World Wars
- V. Who Belongs to the Healthy Body of the Nation? Health and National Integration in Poland and the Polish Army after the First World War 117
- VI. Transatlantic Humanitarianism: Jewish Child Relief in Budapest after the Great War 145
- VII. The Bodily Disabled as a Poster Boy-Veteran: War Invalids in the Soviet Union after the Second World War 173
- VIII. Afflicted Heroes: The Rise and Fall of Yugoslav War Neurosis after the Second World War 195
-
III. Regulating Societies After 1945: State-Socialist Policies and Legacies
- IX. Politics and Family Conflicts through the Psychiatric Lens: East Berlin’s Charité in the early GDR 217
- X. Turning Women into Alcoholics: The Politics of Alcohol in Late Socialist Czechoslovakia 243
- XI. “The Gypsy Population Is Constantly Growing”: Roma and the Politics of Reproduction in Cold War Hungary 263
- XII. Underimplementing the Law: Social Work, Bureaucratic Error, and the Politics of Distribution in Postsocialist Serbia 293
- Collective Bibliography 315
- List of Contributors 335
- Index 339