Book
Battling Smallpox before Vaccination
Inoculation in Eighteenth-Century Germany
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2022
Purchasable on brill.com
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About this book
When smallpox inoculation entered western medical practice in 1721 it aroused considerable controversy. A broad-based cohort of enlightened Germans such as publishers, poets, pastors and elite women attempted to dispel the doubts and encourage the innovative procedure. Yet many parents remained fearful, and the contagiousness of inoculation also necessitated a new approach. National pride in the past defeat of bubonic plague aroused optimism that smallpox could be banished using a similar strategy. The arrival in 1800 of Jenner’s vaccine ended the debates by offering yet another promising new approach.
Battling Smallpox before Vaccination explores the social and medical impacts of inoculation. It offers belated recognition for the valiant attempts of the many protagonists battling against the so-called ‘murdering angel’ before Edward Jenner’s discovery of vaccination. It provides a comprehensive description and penetrating analysis of the understanding and perception of smallpox, the propagation of pro-inoculation information, varied reactions to inoculation, and debates over the idealistic goal of eradicating smallpox.
Battling Smallpox before Vaccination explores the social and medical impacts of inoculation. It offers belated recognition for the valiant attempts of the many protagonists battling against the so-called ‘murdering angel’ before Edward Jenner’s discovery of vaccination. It provides a comprehensive description and penetrating analysis of the understanding and perception of smallpox, the propagation of pro-inoculation information, varied reactions to inoculation, and debates over the idealistic goal of eradicating smallpox.
Author / Editor information
Jennifer D. Penschow (PhD Med. 1994 Melbourne; PhD His. 2016 Tasmania) has one international patent and 39 peer-reviewed collaborative publications, including two articles in Nature, mainly with research teams at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute, Melbourne, the Howard Florey Institute, Melbourne, and the Department of Biochemistry, University of Tasmania. At present she is an independent scholar.
Reviews
"das Werk [bietet] einen angenehm lesbaren Überblick über die literarische Auseinandersetzung mit der Inokulation."
[the work offers a pleasant readable overview of the literary debate of inoculation].
- Elena Taddei (Innsbruck), Francia recensio 2022-3, DOI:https://doi.org/10.11588/frrec.2022.3.90529
[the work offers a pleasant readable overview of the literary debate of inoculation].
- Elena Taddei (Innsbruck), Francia recensio 2022-3, DOI:https://doi.org/10.11588/frrec.2022.3.90529
Topics
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
December 6, 2021
eBook ISBN:
9789004465374
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
296
Illustrations:
5
Coloured Illustrations:
13
Line drawings:
2
Tables:
1
eBook ISBN:
9789004465374
Keywords for this book
prophylaxis; disease prevention; Enlightenment; medical procedure; German society; child mortality; childhood disease; immunisation; epidemic; contagion; variolation; smallpox poetry; viral disease; history of medicine
Audience(s) for this book
Historians of medicine and of eighteenth-century Germany and Europe, social historians, doctors interested in immunology and infectious diseases, advanced-level undergraduate students, post-graduate students, and perhaps general readers, medical research institutes, organisations marketing vaccines to resistant populations.