Book Reviews significant increase in research into Welsh Wales into the background. For example, in the medical history, with many good studies, chapter by Hirst, and in the contribution by Medicine in Wales is a welcome addition to what Richard Coopey and Owen Roberts on the is still a limited historiography. municipalization of water, the Welsh dimension As the editor makes clear, Medicine in Wales is is subordinate to a metropolitan or English designed to ‘‘illustrate the growing corpus of history. David Greaves in his synthesis of debates research-based material’’ (p. 2) on the social about inequalities in health and medical care history of medicine and health in Wales. Its makes little reference to Wales despite the content is deliberately diverse. The contributors problems the region faced. Given the peculiar draw on a range of sources from documentary economic, social, and political milieu of Wales, records to oral testimony to film to examine the this seems a missed opportunity. relationship between the public and private Despite this criticism, the volume has its provision of healthcare since c. 1800. This strengths. For example, Michael in her telling relationship provides the intellectual context for analysis of suicide in north Wales examines how the volume. Drawing on Juurgen€ Habermas’s the Denbigh asylum came to replace the family as notion of the public and private sphere, the a source of care and how suicide was contributorsraisequestionsabouttheutilityofthis medicalized. Coopey and Roberts add further approach by examining issues of class, gender, weight to the need to revise the heroic participation and citizenship, and the role of the historiography of state intervention. They state. David Hirst, for example, in his chapter on demonstrate how local authorities were the school medical service, highlights how the important in shaping local initiatives and how the relationship between family and state was nature of satisfactory water remained a contested unresolved in the service, and how the state commodity. Borsay suggests how documentary remainedambivalentaboutofferingmedicalcare. film could push the boundaries of the public Steven Thompson in examining the provision sphere, helping to construct citizenship around offered by medical aid societies shows how they stereotypes of masculinity and femininity. created a forum for participatory democracy that Questions are also raised about the nature of rural represented a ‘‘proletarian’’ public sphere, one services and the urban/rural divide that shaped that effectively determined the nature of local medical provision in Wales. medical care and authority. Borsay on the other The volume demonstrates that medicine and hand demonstrates how in the treatment of health in Wales cannot be reduced to a simple industrial accidents in the 1940s independence equation between public service and private suffered when the state intervened. Chapters by commodity. In raising questions about the public Sara Brady on nursing at the King Edward VII sphere, and in highlighting the rich medical Hospital and Susan Pitt on midwifery in post-war history of Wales, Medicine in Wales suggests that Swansea point to how there is no simple equation the ‘‘Welsh context’’ offers a vibrant and under- between gender and the public/private sphere. In researched field for the study of the history of questioning the boundaries between the public medicine. and private provision of healthcare, the contributors offer a critique that supports the Keir Waddington, concept of a mixed economy of welfare and a Cardiff University ‘‘moving frontier’’ between private, voluntary and public provision of medical care. Ian Dowbiggin, A merciful end: the However, this is a mixed collection. Aside movement in modern America, from Pamela Michael, Thompson and Borsay, New York, , 2003, many of the contributors pass little comment on pp. xix, 250, $28.00 (hardback 0-19-515443-6). Welsh national identity, or look at what Gwyn Williams has referred to as the ‘‘Welsh effect’’. Nick Kemp recently produced a history of the Indeed, some of the contributors appear to push British euthanasia movement ‘Merciful release’

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Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 170.106.33.19, on 27 Sep 2021 at 14:26:56, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0025727300008097 Book Reviews (Manchester University Press, 2002). Now, with through Dowbiggin’s history is the tension this new book by Ian Dowbiggin, we have a between public authority and personal companion volume that charts the history of the autonomy, between paternalism and individual euthanasia movement in modern America. freedom. He ends with the new issues posed Opening with the Jack Kevorkian case, by September 11, and concludes that the question Dowbiggin’s book has six short chapters. The of ‘‘where does the freedom to die end and the first charts the history of euthanasia as a concept duty to die begin’’ remains unanswered (p. 177). and a practice from classical Antiquity to the One of the difficulties faced by Dowbiggin is Progressive era. The next, entitled that he has to contend with a large cast of ‘Breakthrough’, covers the period 1920–40, and individuals (; William J Robinson; the establishment of the Euthanasia Society of Charles Francis Potter; Charles Killick Millard; America (ESA) in 1938. The third chapter, called Inez Celia Philbrick; Eleanor Dwight Jones; ‘Stalemate’, surveys the struggles of the ESA Joseph Fletcher; and Olive Ruth Russell among with the Roman in the years others). Similarly, by the 1970s the picture 1940–60. Chapter four, ‘Riding a great wave’, becomes very complex as the movement deals with the period between 1960 and 1975, fractured into numerous smaller organizations including the reinvention of the ESA with the with frequent name changes (the Society for the idea of passive euthanasia in the 1960s. The Right to Die; Concern for Dying; the Hemlock following chapter, ‘Not that simple’, covers the Society; Choice in Dying; Partnership for Caring, splits that characterized the 1970s, and the and so on). Nevertheless Dowbiggin has coped emergence of new populist right to die admirably with these problems to produce a organizations in the 1990s. The conclusion deals thoroughly researched and well-written history with the 1990s and beyond, a period when many that convincingly explains the reasons for the ebb Americans have come to believe that euthanasia and flow of support for euthanasia, locating these or assisted suicide would be bad public policy, movements within wider national and and when no conclusive outcome is in sight. international contexts. Dowbiggin is unable here Dowbiggin has had privileged access to the to engage with the recently published Kemp files of the euthanasia movement, and he is keen volume. However, comparative studies of Britain to explode the myths that euthanasia only began and America (and elsewhere) would seem one in the 1960s and 1970s, and that it should be obvious way to provide new perspectives on seen as a triumphalist struggle. Other important ‘‘society’s long struggle to deal with the grim themes that emerge from his admirably brief but reality of human disintegration that we call wide-ranging study include the way that death’’ (p. xiv). euthanasia intersected with other progressive social causes, such as birth control, abortion, and John Welshman, . Euthanasia was seen ‘‘as a critical Lancaster University component of a broad reform agenda designed to emancipate American society from anachronistic Martin Dinges (ed.), Patients in the history of and ultimately unhealthy ideas about sex, birth, homoeopathy, Network Series 5, Sheffield, and death’’ (p. 30), but also was bedevilled by European Association for the History of perennial fears that mercy killing would be Medicine and Health Publications, 2002, pp. xiii, extended to people with disabilities. Dowbiggin 434, UK £39.95, Europe £43.33, USA £52.10, shows that support for euthanasia in the 1900s elsewhere £47.82 (hardback 0-9536522-4-6). was due more to shifting ideas, attitudes, and social forces than to changes in medical practice Using an array of sources from the eighteenth and technology. Equally important have been the to the twentieth century, this volume addresses interchangeable social, biological, economic, the question ‘‘Why did and why do patients come and humanitarian justifications that have been to homoeopathy?’’ The answer is framed in advanced in its support. A final theme running market model terms in four sections: patients in

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Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 170.106.33.19, on 27 Sep 2021 at 14:26:56, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0025727300008097