Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Price: $21.95

Format:
Paperback 264 pp.
24 b/w halftones, 129 mm x 196 mm

ISBN-10:
0199543763

ISBN-13:
9780199543762

Publication date:
August 2010

Imprint: OUP UK

Share on Facebook

Add to Favourites Tell a Friend


Alternative Medicine?

A History

Dr. Roberta Bivins

Walk into the local health food shop or pick up today's paper and the chances are that you'll see adverts for acupuncture and herbal medicine, hypnotists and homeopaths. Some doctors and scientists mourn the lost lustre of mainstream medicine and complain about a new breed of 'irrational' consumer.

But what exactly is 'alternative' medicine? Is the astonishing popularity of alternative and multicultural medicine really such a recent development? And, given the success story of modern biomedical science, why are alternative and traditional treatments now so fashionable? Has the impersonal chill of high-tech medicine driven consumers into the arms of charismatic quacks? Or is it the cost of western medicine that makes its competitors look so attractive? Do patients seek hope, holism, or just the thrill of rebellion?

This book seeks answers to all these questions and more. Comparing the medical systems of China, India, and the west - both mainstream and alternative - Roberta Bivins shows how medical expertise has migrated from one culture to another. From acupuncture in Regency England to homeopathy in the 'Wild West', Bivins unearths the roots of today's distinctions between alternative, complementary, and orthodox medicine, and shows how popular interest in medical alternatives - often of exotic origin - is a phenomenon with a long and fascinating pedigree.

Readership : All those interested in alternative and complementary medicine and the history of these forms of medicine.

Reviews

  • Review from previous edition: "A brilliant foil to the privileging of Western medicine, this is cross-cultural history at its best - lively, acute, richly informative, and wonderfully revealing."

    --Roger Cooter, Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine, University College London
  • "Extremely engaging... an imaginative, elegantly written and well constructed account, combining accessibility with good scholarship in the best possible way"

    --Carsten Timmermann, University of Manchester
  • "Ground breaking... Roberta Bivins demonstrates the complex routes that medical knowledge and practice travelled, east to west, north to south, and back again... and disrupts our contemporary notions of "alternative" medicine."

    --Allan M. Brandt, author of The Cigarette Century: The Rise, Fall, and Deadly Persistence of the Product that Defined America
  • "I recommend this book to anyone with more than a passing interest in 'alternative' medicine."

    --Edzard Ernst, author of The Desktop Guide to Complementary and Alternative Medicine
  • "Roberta Bivins does a much-needed service to history and medicine by demonstrating that 'alternative medicine' is nothing new, but is as old as the first globalizing exchanges between Europe and Asia in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Medicine has seldom been so powerfully presented in its diverse cultural and changing historical contexts. A fascinating and richly illuminating book."

    --David Arnold, University of Warwick
  • "It is well written, concise, yet wide-ranging."

    --British Journal for the History of Science 2009
  • "This well-written and painstakingly researched book would enhance any history of medicine collection."

    --Doody's Notes April 08
  • "[an] elegant and engaging book...Bivins takes us on a fascinating journey from east to west and back again"

    --Financial Times 20/10/2007
  • "This compact, densely written history effectively demonstrates how alternative medicine has survived and prospered in the 21st century."

    --The Independent 26/10/07
  • "A fascinating read... illuminating book"

    --Nayanah Siva, New Scientist 03/11/2007

Introduction: 'Rival systems of medicine'?
1. 'What is this burning?'
2. Health and 'The New Science'
3. 'The Chinese have a great deal of wit'
4. 'With our Western brethren, the case seems to be quite different'
5. Conclusion: Pragmatism, Pluralism and the (Im)Patient-Consumer
Further Reading
Notes
Index

There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.

Roberta Bivins is Associate Professor in the Department of History at the University of Warwick. Her work focuses on the transmission of medical expertise between cultures, as exemplified by the transmission of acupuncture to the west, and by the medical experiences of non-western immigrants in multicultural Britain and America.

Bad Medicine - David Wootton
Clean - Virginia Smith

Special Features

  • The story of 'alternative' medicine - and why it is so popular.
  • Lays bare the distinctions between 'alternative', 'complementary' and 'orthodox' medicine and explains how these distinctions arose.
  • Uses a wealth of illuminating and entertaining historical examples, from horse-racing English earls to desperate missionaries in 17th century Indonesia, from hypnotism in the British Raj to homeopathy in the American 'Wild West'.
  • Shows how the medical systems of China, India, and the west - both mainstream and alternative - have influenced each other over the centuries.