Book
Bynum, W.F.;
Porter, Roy;
(1987)
Medical fringe and medical orthodoxy, 1750-1850
Book
Fara, Patricia;
(1996)
Sympathetic attractions: Magnetic practices, beliefs, and symbolism in 18th-century England
Article
Schnorrenberg, Barbara Brandon;
(1991)
A true relation of the life and career of James Graham, 1745-1794
Article
Brown, P.S.;
(1988)
Nineteenth-century American health reformers and the Nature Cure movement in Britain
Article
Parssinen, Terry M.;
(1977)
Mesmeric performers
Article
Cody, Lisa Forman;
(1999)
“No cure, no money”, or The invisible hand of quackery: The language of commerce, credit, and cash in 18th-century British medical advertisements
Chapter
Miller, Jonathan;
(1995)
Going unconscious
Article
Schupbach, W.;
(1985)
Sequah: An English “American Medicine”-man in 1890
Book
Porter, Roy;
(1989)
Health for sale: Quackery in England, 1660-1850
Article
Hilton, Christopher;
(1995)
Elizabeth Gaskell and Mesmerism: An unpublished letter
Book
Nicholls, Phillip A.;
(1988)
Homoeopathy and the medical profession
Article
Doherty, Francis;
(1990)
The Anodyne Necklace: A quack remedy and its promotion
Article
Brown, P.S.;
(1991)
Medically qualified naturopaths and the General Medical Council
Book
Fenouillat, Nadine;
(1991)
Médecins et charlatans en Angleterre (1760-1815)
Book
Winter, Alison;
(1998)
Mesmerized: Powers of mind in Victorian Britain
Chapter
Sturdy, Steve;
(1992)
From the trenches to the hospitals at home: Physiologists, clinicians and oxygen therapy
Article
Fara, Patricia;
(1995)
An attractive therapy: Animal magnetism in 18th-century England
Chapter
Porter, Roy;
(1987)
The language of quackery in England, 1660-1800
Article
Winter, Alison;
(1994)
Mesmerism and popular culture in early Victorian England
Chapter
Cooter, Roger;
(1991)
Dichotomy and denial: Mesmerism, medicine, and Harriet Martineau
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