Wash and Be Healed: The Water-Cure Movement and Women's Health

In a century characterized by dramatic health-care remedies—bloodletting, purging, and leeching, for example—hydropathy was one of the most celebrated alternative forms of medical care. Unlike these other cures, however, hydropathy, which entailed various applications of cold water, also staunchly advocated the reformation of such personal habits as diet, exercise, dress, and way of life. Susan E. Cayleff explores the relationship between this fascinating sect of nineteenth-century medicine and the women who took the cure.

Wash and Be Healed investigates the theories, practices, medical and social philosophies, institutions, and the most prominent proponents of the water-cure movement and studies them in relation to the diverse reform networks of the nineteenth century. Documenting the popularity and importance of hydropathy among female activists, Cayleff argues that the water-cure movement was overpowered by allopathic (or orthodox) medicine which viewed hydropathy as a crackpot therapeutic largely because of its close association with nineteenth-century social activism. The book gives us an alternative view of social and sexual relationships which should contribute to the growing awareness among scholars that the history of health and healing must be more than the history of allopathic medicine.

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Wash and Be Healed: The Water-Cure Movement and Women's Health

In a century characterized by dramatic health-care remedies—bloodletting, purging, and leeching, for example—hydropathy was one of the most celebrated alternative forms of medical care. Unlike these other cures, however, hydropathy, which entailed various applications of cold water, also staunchly advocated the reformation of such personal habits as diet, exercise, dress, and way of life. Susan E. Cayleff explores the relationship between this fascinating sect of nineteenth-century medicine and the women who took the cure.

Wash and Be Healed investigates the theories, practices, medical and social philosophies, institutions, and the most prominent proponents of the water-cure movement and studies them in relation to the diverse reform networks of the nineteenth century. Documenting the popularity and importance of hydropathy among female activists, Cayleff argues that the water-cure movement was overpowered by allopathic (or orthodox) medicine which viewed hydropathy as a crackpot therapeutic largely because of its close association with nineteenth-century social activism. The book gives us an alternative view of social and sexual relationships which should contribute to the growing awareness among scholars that the history of health and healing must be more than the history of allopathic medicine.

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Wash and Be Healed: The Water-Cure Movement and Women's Health

Wash and Be Healed: The Water-Cure Movement and Women's Health

by Susan Cayleff
Wash and Be Healed: The Water-Cure Movement and Women's Health

Wash and Be Healed: The Water-Cure Movement and Women's Health

by Susan Cayleff

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Overview

In a century characterized by dramatic health-care remedies—bloodletting, purging, and leeching, for example—hydropathy was one of the most celebrated alternative forms of medical care. Unlike these other cures, however, hydropathy, which entailed various applications of cold water, also staunchly advocated the reformation of such personal habits as diet, exercise, dress, and way of life. Susan E. Cayleff explores the relationship between this fascinating sect of nineteenth-century medicine and the women who took the cure.

Wash and Be Healed investigates the theories, practices, medical and social philosophies, institutions, and the most prominent proponents of the water-cure movement and studies them in relation to the diverse reform networks of the nineteenth century. Documenting the popularity and importance of hydropathy among female activists, Cayleff argues that the water-cure movement was overpowered by allopathic (or orthodox) medicine which viewed hydropathy as a crackpot therapeutic largely because of its close association with nineteenth-century social activism. The book gives us an alternative view of social and sexual relationships which should contribute to the growing awareness among scholars that the history of health and healing must be more than the history of allopathic medicine.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781439904275
Publisher: Temple University Press
Publication date: 05/18/2010
Series: Health Society And Policy
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 264
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Susan E. Cayleff is Associate Professor in the Department of Women’s Studies at San Diego State University.

Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Rise of Medical Sectarianism
1. Wash and Be Healed: The Hydropathic Alternative
2. Hydropathy, Woman' sPhysiology, and Her Role
3. Ideology in Practice: Water-Cure Establishments
4. Hydropathy and the Reform Movements
5. Women at the Cures: Rest for the Weary Activist
Conclusion: Demise and Legacy of the Water-Cure Movement
Notes
An Essay on Sources
Index

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