PHYSICIAN HEAL THYSELF - DRINK, TEMPERANCE AND THE MEDICAL QUESTION IN THE VICTORIAN AND EDWARDIAN CHURCH-OF-ENGLAND, 1830-1914

Authors
Citation
Gw. Olsen, PHYSICIAN HEAL THYSELF - DRINK, TEMPERANCE AND THE MEDICAL QUESTION IN THE VICTORIAN AND EDWARDIAN CHURCH-OF-ENGLAND, 1830-1914, Addiction, 89(9), 1994, pp. 1167-1176
Citations number
67
Categorie Soggetti
Substance Abuse",Psychiatry,"Substance Abuse",Psychiatry
Journal title
ISSN journal
09652140
Volume
89
Issue
9
Year of publication
1994
Pages
1167 - 1176
Database
ISI
SICI code
0965-2140(1994)89:9<1167:PHT-DT>2.0.ZU;2-J
Abstract
This paper examines the connection between medical research and temper ance from the point of view of the Anglican temperance movement in thr ee periods: (1) 1830-55, when Anglican clergymen resisted teetotalism in favour of moderation, in keeping with accepted medical opinion; (2) 1855-73, when a minority of Anglican teetotal clergymen attempted uns uccessfully to convert the Anglican Church to teetotalism and prohibit ion, as the medical profession in theory, but not always in practice, discouraged excessive therapeutic reliance on alcohol; and (3) 1873-19 14, when the prestigious Church of England Temperance Society, with a dual basis, promoted teetotalism among the majority but affirmed the l egitimacy of moderate drinking among the British medical and social el ite.