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11 - Mrs Robinson's ‘Day-book of Iniquity’: Reading Bodies of/and Evidence in the Context of the 1858 Medical Reform Act

Janice M. Allan
Affiliation:
University of Salford, UK
Andrew Mangham
Affiliation:
University of Reading
Greta Depledge
Affiliation:
Birkbeck College, University of London
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Summary

Through the summer months of 1858, the newspaper-reading public was both shocked and tantalized by the ubiquitous and detailed reporting of the Robinson v. Robinson and Lane divorce case. Despite the fact that this case was deemed, by the Lord Chief Justice no less, to be nothing short of ‘remarkable in its character and circumstances’, few modern readers appear aware of its existence, let alone its import. Thus this chapter is, in part, an act of essential recuperation. For as was recognized, even at the time, the Robinson divorce case involved ‘large social interests […] which have a much wider range than the petty and personal issues among the individuals immediately implicated or concerned’. Coming before the public at a pivotal moment in the professionalization of medicine – the passing of the 1858 Medical Reform Act – the case directed the nation's attention towards a singularly important encounter between physician and patient. As we shall see, the ‘large social interests’ arising from this seemingly ‘petty and personal’ encounter involved nothing less than the collective authority and status of the medical profession.

Opening their copy of The Times on 15 June 1858, readers encountered the following narrative about the marriage and divorce of Mr and Mrs Robinson. The petitioner, Mr Henry Robinson, a civil engineer, married the respondent, Isabella Elizabeth Robinson, then a widow with an independent income, in 1844.

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Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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