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3 - Community of Practice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 October 2020

Stefanie Gänger
Affiliation:
Universität Heidelberg
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Summary

Chapter 3 examines how medical formulae for ‘preparations of the bark’ traversed Atlantic societies over the late 1700s, and early 1800s – through practitioners’ and sufferers’ exposure to the written word, medical practice, or word of mouth. The chapter argues that methods for arranging and administering the bark had by that time coalesced into identifiable formulae – ‘bittersweet’ ‘febrifugal lemonades’, and ‘aromatic’ ‘compound wines of the bark’, most notably – that would have been familiar, and ‘agreeable’ to men and women the Atlantic World over: home-made in a Lima household, available from an Italian apothecary and popular at the Moroccan court. The chapter contends that these formulae, though they commonly exhibited structural similarities in the composition, also accommodated a measure of variability. Indeed, medical practitioners tinkered with their particulars, subtly adapting them to the sufferers’ palate, creed or means, in ways that would frequently have accounted for these preparations’ prevalence and appeal.

Type
Chapter
Information
A Singular Remedy
Cinchona Across the Atlantic World, 1751–1820
, pp. 91 - 119
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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