Description

Book Synopsis
Medicine and public health clearly advanced during the war-and continued to do so after military hostilities ceased.

Trade Review
An immensely readable synthesis of what [Humphreys] terms 'the greatest health disaster that this country has ever experienced.' The News & Observer Humphreys' work accomplishes several tasks. It puts mid-nineteenth century health care through a prism of military concerns, civilian responses to war, medical science, and women's environment. It offers clear and concise depictions of individuals and their vendettas, such as military officers embracing or not tolerating civilian efforts. Marrow of Tragedy presents a compelling story of Americans, civilian and military, struggling together to do acts of mercy and create better environments during an era of brother against brother bloodshed. Civil War Book Review In many ways, Marrow of Tragedy is likely to remain the definitive general medical history of the war for years to come... The book has high production values and makes one of the most important contributions to our understanding of that so-called third army of the Civil War-disease-and the efforts of those on both sides of the Mason-Dixon to fight it. It needs to be read by specialists and nonspecialists alike and should find a place on the shelf of every academic library worthy of the name. Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences Margaret Humphreys has made a significant contribution to the literature of Civil War medicine and of medicine in general by sharply focusing on rear-echelon military healthcare. She adroitly uses primary and secondary sources to explain the implications of such innovations as hospitals, nongovernmental organizations, reforms in sanitation, and the employment of women as nurses and other healthcare workers. For anyone interested in war and medicine, Marrow of Tragedy shines a bright light on previously unexplored aspects of the Civil War and their impact on American society. Michigan War Studies Review Through each chapter, Humphreys challenges our understanding of mid-nineteenth-century American medicine... Humphreys has done an outstanding job presenting a comprehensive picture of the stat of health care before, during, and in the years following the Civil War... Marrow of Tragedy is a valuable contribution to the literature of the history of medicine during the Civil War and should be read by anyone seeking a deeper understanding of the time period. Margaret Humphreys is to be commended for work well done. -- Michael C. Hardy Blue and Gray Magazine

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Understanding Civil War Medicine
2. Women, War, and Medicine
3. Infectious Disease in the Civil War
4. Connecting Home to Hospital and Camp
5. The Sanitary Commission and Its Critics
6. The Union's General Hospital
7. Medicine for a New Nation
8. Confederate Medicine
9. Mitigating the Horrors of War
10. A Public Health Legacy
11. Medicine in Postwar America
Afterword
Notes
Index

Marrow of Tragedy

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    A Hardback by Margaret Humphreys

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      View other formats and editions of Marrow of Tragedy by Margaret Humphreys

      Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
      Publication Date: 27/10/2013
      ISBN13: 9781421409993, 978-1421409993
      ISBN10: 1421409992

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Medicine and public health clearly advanced during the war-and continued to do so after military hostilities ceased.

      Trade Review
      An immensely readable synthesis of what [Humphreys] terms 'the greatest health disaster that this country has ever experienced.' The News & Observer Humphreys' work accomplishes several tasks. It puts mid-nineteenth century health care through a prism of military concerns, civilian responses to war, medical science, and women's environment. It offers clear and concise depictions of individuals and their vendettas, such as military officers embracing or not tolerating civilian efforts. Marrow of Tragedy presents a compelling story of Americans, civilian and military, struggling together to do acts of mercy and create better environments during an era of brother against brother bloodshed. Civil War Book Review In many ways, Marrow of Tragedy is likely to remain the definitive general medical history of the war for years to come... The book has high production values and makes one of the most important contributions to our understanding of that so-called third army of the Civil War-disease-and the efforts of those on both sides of the Mason-Dixon to fight it. It needs to be read by specialists and nonspecialists alike and should find a place on the shelf of every academic library worthy of the name. Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences Margaret Humphreys has made a significant contribution to the literature of Civil War medicine and of medicine in general by sharply focusing on rear-echelon military healthcare. She adroitly uses primary and secondary sources to explain the implications of such innovations as hospitals, nongovernmental organizations, reforms in sanitation, and the employment of women as nurses and other healthcare workers. For anyone interested in war and medicine, Marrow of Tragedy shines a bright light on previously unexplored aspects of the Civil War and their impact on American society. Michigan War Studies Review Through each chapter, Humphreys challenges our understanding of mid-nineteenth-century American medicine... Humphreys has done an outstanding job presenting a comprehensive picture of the stat of health care before, during, and in the years following the Civil War... Marrow of Tragedy is a valuable contribution to the literature of the history of medicine during the Civil War and should be read by anyone seeking a deeper understanding of the time period. Margaret Humphreys is to be commended for work well done. -- Michael C. Hardy Blue and Gray Magazine

      Table of Contents

      List of Illustrations
      Acknowledgments
      Introduction
      1. Understanding Civil War Medicine
      2. Women, War, and Medicine
      3. Infectious Disease in the Civil War
      4. Connecting Home to Hospital and Camp
      5. The Sanitary Commission and Its Critics
      6. The Union's General Hospital
      7. Medicine for a New Nation
      8. Confederate Medicine
      9. Mitigating the Horrors of War
      10. A Public Health Legacy
      11. Medicine in Postwar America
      Afterword
      Notes
      Index

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