In Quest of a Cure : Literary and Medical Cultures of the Health Resort

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In Quest of a Cure : Literary and Medical Cultures of the Health Resort

  • 著者名:Shuttleworth, Sally
  • 価格 ¥7,037 (本体¥6,398)
  • OUP Oxford(2026/01/30発売)
  • ポイント 63pt (実際に付与されるポイントはご注文内容確認画面でご確認下さい)
  • 言語:ENG
  • eISBN:9780198972464

ファイル: /

Description

People have always travelled for health, but as industrial pollution increased in nineteenth-century Britain, doctors started ordering their patients abroad in ever-growing numbers. Self-styled 'English Colonies' sprung up, not in the far-reaches of the Empire, but in health resorts in the heart of Europe. This work explores the intensity and sheer strangeness of life in these colonies, governed by illness, but where patients (before the rise of the sanatorium) could move around freely, and even indulge in winter sports. Focusing on Menton on the Riviera and Davos in the Swiss Alps, from the 1860s to the 1920s, In Quest of a Cure explores the literary and medical cultures of these resorts: the lives, conflicting emotions, and writings of the patients and their carers, and the changing patterns of medical treatment. Many of the patients ordered to winter abroad had tuberculosis, but others were cases of nervous disorders, or sufferers from 'overwork', what we would now call burnout, all hoping to be cured once placed in the right climatic environment.Blending medical and literary history and analysis, Sally Shuttleworth looks in depth at the lives and writings of literary invalids, including John Addington Symonds, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Katherine Mansfield, leading up to an extended study of Thomas Mann's The Magic Mountain, placed in the medical and literary context of Davos life. Other literary lives and fiction explored include Henry James, Arthur Conan Doyle, Olive Schreiner, Vernon Lee, 'new woman' novelist Beatrice Harraden, and Llewelyn Powys. In Quest of a Cure considers the pleasures as well as the pains of medical exile, and the close bonds which often developed between doctor and patient. Medical climatology, as it was called, is a discarded science, but its prescription of fresh air, exercise, and sunshine brought about a revolution in medical practices at the time. In its understanding of the relationship between individual health and surrounding environment, it offers new perspectives for us to think about the challenges of current times.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Part I. Mentone
  • 1: Bodies and Climates
  • 2: Invalid Lives
  • Part II. Davos
  • 3: Winter in Davos
  • 4: Robert Louis Stevenson: Itinerant Invalid
  • PartIII. Davos at the Fin de Siècle
  • 5: Malingering Microbes and Winter Sports
  • 6: Nervous Afflictions and Modernity: Davos Fictions
  • 7: Revolving Huts, Open-Air Schools, and the Rise of the English Sanatorium
  • Part IV. Menton, Davos, and Modernism
  • 8: Katherine Mansfield and Her 'stray dog'
  • 9: Llewelyn Powys: The Unconquered Worm
  • 10: Invalids on High: The Magic Mountain
  • Conclusion

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