WHERE TO BUY |
Mothers and Medicine: A Social History of Infant Feeding, 1890–1950
University of Wisconsin Press, 1987 Cloth: 978-0-299-11480-0 | Paper: 978-0-299-11484-8 | eISBN: 978-0-299-11483-1
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE | BUY THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK
In the nineteenth century, infants were commonly breast-fed; by the middle of the twentieth century, women typically bottle-fed their babies on the advice of their doctors. In this book, Rima D. Apple discloses and analyzes the complex interactions of science, medicine, economics, and culture that underlie this dramatic shift in infant-care practices and women’s lives. AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Rima D. Apple is a Fellow in the Department of the History of Medicine and a member of the Women’s Studies Programs at the University of Wisconsin—Madison. She has lectured at the University of Melbourne and at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, where she compiled the Illustrated Catalogue of the Slide Archive of Historical Medical Photographs at Stony Brook. Her work has appeared in the Bulletin of the History of Medicine and she has contributed to several books, including Women and Health in America, edited by Judith Walzer Leavitt and published in 1984 by the University of Wisconsin Press. REVIEWS
“The strength of Apple’s book is her ability to indicate how the mutual interests of mothers, doctors, and manufacturers led to the transformation of infant feeding. . . . Historians of science will be impressed with the way she probes the connections between the medical profession and the manufacturers and with her ability to demonstrate how medical theories were translated into medical practice.”—Janet Golden, Isis "Apple’s Mothers and Medicine is a fascinating sociohistorical documentation of infant feeding practices, of the mother’s role in the creation of information and hospital support systems, and the development of pediatrics as a medical specialty."—Choice Magazine "Apple’s book is an important contribution to the social history of American medicine. It will be invaluable, however, not only to historians of medicine, but to others interested in the historical relationships between physicians, infants, and their parents."—Susan E. Lederer, The History of Medicine
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
BiblioVault may have an electronic file which would meet your requirements for this title:
BUY THIS BOOK
Available from University of Wisconsin Press in: cloth, paper, ebook. This title is also available as an ebook at: Amazon Kindle Barnes & Noble Nook OverDrive See other books on: Health & Fitness | history | Medicine | Physicians | Social History See other titles from University of Wisconsin Press |
|
More to explore:
Popular Culture
| |