• Search Research Projects
  • Search Researchers
  • How to Use
  1. Back to previous page

The Birth of Medical Market and Its Regulation : A Case Study of Consumer Society in the Nineteenth Century

Research Project

Project/Area Number 12630087
Research Category

Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C)

Allocation TypeSingle-year Grants
Section一般
Research Field Economic history
Research InstitutionSophia University

Principal Investigator

KITO Hiroshi (2001)  Sophia U., Dept. of Economics, Professor, 経済学部, 教授 (50138377)

上山 隆大 (2000)  上智大学, 経済学部, 教授 (10193848)

Co-Investigator(Kenkyū-buntansha) 鬼頭 宏  上智大学, 経済学部, 教授 (50138377)
Project Period (FY) 2000 – 2001
Project Status Completed (Fiscal Year 2001)
Budget Amount *help
¥1,900,000 (Direct Cost: ¥1,900,000)
Fiscal Year 2001: ¥800,000 (Direct Cost: ¥800,000)
Fiscal Year 2000: ¥1,100,000 (Direct Cost: ¥1,100,000)
KeywordsMedical History / Consumer Society / Electro-therapeutics / History of Science / Market Society
Research Abstract

This study examines the ways in which the nineteenth century medical world in Britain was constructed by a growing consumer culture and the commodification of health. Many historians have assumed that although in the eighteenth century, medicine was mainly directed by peoples' desire to buy health in free-for-all medical market in which little demarcation existed between regular physicians and itinerant quack vendors, in the nineteenth century medicine became a dignified field through the ongoing professionalization of the society. Examination of the medical commodities and doctors' market-oriented behaviors in late Victorian period, however, shows that this scenario needs to be reconsidered.
Through the increasing market activities of industrialized society, commodity relations became more and more important in the late nineteenth century. Urbanization of the town, and the prosperity of middle class in the cities led to the increase in shopping activities and a growth of hedonistic des … More ires toward commodities. Surrounded by a dazzling advertising culture, consumers bought commodities for the sake of their self-realization and to pursue more hedonistic purposes. Medicine was no exception. Medical doctors were never able to overlook consumers' desire to improve their health in a fully commercialized context. Understanding medical personnel as full participants in this context reveals that uniformity of medical profession was not, in fact, the sole or even principal characteristic of the nineteenth century medical medicine.
This study examines the ways in which medical professionals became affiliated with numerous medical commodities such as electric belts, electro-massage machines, Turkish Bath, and multifarious patent medicines. Electro-therapeutic goods are examined first, as a most scandalous case which incited the serious censorship by elite doctors. In the technologizing late Victorian age, electricity and medicine not only became a the hotbed of professional debate and tumult, but also created a hope for newly emerging professionals like electrical engineers to extend their business opportunities.
I conclude, therefore, that even before the efflorescence of lave Victorian commodity culture and people's way self-illusory hedonistic culmination toward consumption, medical capitalism had permeated the seemingly well-established purity of medical professionalism. As a result the medical profession in the nineteenth century shows itself as more various and less controlled than the traditional scenario has described. Less

Report

(3 results)
  • 2001 Annual Research Report   Final Research Report Summary
  • 2000 Annual Research Report
  • Research Products

    (14 results)

All Other

All Publications (14 results)

  • [Publications] Takahiro Ueyama: "Profession and Market : BMA's Campaign against Patent Medicine Reconsidered"上智経済論集. 44巻2号. 1-23 (1999)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(和文)」より
    • Related Report
      2001 Final Research Report Summary
  • [Publications] Takahiro Ueyama: "Capital, Profession and Medical Technology : The Electro-Therapeutic Institutes and the Royal College of Physicians, 1884-1922"Medical History. 41. 150-181 (1997)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(和文)」より
    • Related Report
      2001 Final Research Report Summary
  • [Publications] Takahiro Ueyama: "Medicine and the Market : Professionalism, Commerce and Electrical Devices, 1860-1918"UMI, Bell & Howell Company. (1999)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(和文)」より
    • Related Report
      2001 Final Research Report Summary
  • [Publications] 鬼頭 宏(共著): "病気と医療の歴史学"東京大学出版会. 300 (2001)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(和文)」より
    • Related Report
      2001 Final Research Report Summary
  • [Publications] 上山隆大(共著): "身体医文化論-欲望と感覚"慶応大学出版会. 300 (2002)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(和文)」より
    • Related Report
      2001 Final Research Report Summary
  • [Publications] Takahiro Ueyama: "Kankaku no Chiryo to Yokubou no Sijou : Massage Therapy and Sexuality in the nineteenth century Britain"Akihito Suzuki and Hisao Ishizuka eds., Shintai Bunkaron : Kankaku to Chitujo,(Keio University Press). (2002)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(欧文)」より
    • Related Report
      2001 Final Research Report Summary
  • [Publications] "Profession and Market: BMA's Campaign against Patent Medicine Reconsidered"Sophia Economics Papers. Vol. 44, no. 2. (1999)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(欧文)」より
    • Related Report
      2001 Final Research Report Summary
  • [Publications] "Capital, Profession, and Medical Technology : The Electro-Therapeutic Institutes and the Royal College of Physicians 1888-1922, (in English)"Medical History. vol. 41. 150-181 (1997)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(欧文)」より
    • Related Report
      2001 Final Research Report Summary
  • [Publications] Hiroshi Kito: "Byoki to Chiryo no Rekishigaku, (Japanese)"U. of Tokyo Press. (2001)

    • Description
      「研究成果報告書概要(欧文)」より
    • Related Report
      2001 Final Research Report Summary
  • [Publications] 鬼頭 宏(共著): "病気と医療の歴史學"東京大学出版会. 300 (2001)

    • Related Report
      2001 Annual Research Report
  • [Publications] 上山隆大(共著): "身体医文化論-欲望と感覚"慶応大学出版会. 300 (2002)

    • Related Report
      2001 Annual Research Report
  • [Publications] Takahiro Ueyama: ""Profession and Market: BMA's Campaign against Patent Medicine Reconsidered""上智経済論集. 44巻2号. 1-23 (1999)

    • Related Report
      2000 Annual Research Report
  • [Publications] Takahiro Ueyama: ""Capital, Profession and Medical Technology: The Electro-Therapeutic Institutes and the Royal College of Physicians, 1884-1922,""Medical History. 41. 150-181 (1997)

    • Related Report
      2000 Annual Research Report
  • [Publications] Takahiro Ueyama: "Medicine and the Market: Professionalism, Commerce and Electrical Devices, 1860-1918"UMI,Bell & Howell Company.. 325 (1999)

    • Related Report
      2000 Annual Research Report

URL: 

Published: 2000-04-01   Modified: 2016-04-21  

Information User Guide FAQ News Terms of Use Attribution of KAKENHI

Powered by NII kakenhi