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Historical Bibliography Updated: June 16, 2026

Morbid undercurrents: Medical subcultures in postrevolutionary France.

Publication Details

Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2021 CE.

"During the 1790s and beyond, medicine left the somber halls of universities, hospitals, and learned societies and became profoundly politicized, inspiring a whole panoply of different—often bizarre and shocking—subcultures. Quinlan reconstructs the ethos of the time and its labyrinthine underworld, traversing the intersection between medicine and pornography in the works of the Marquis de Sade, efforts to create a "natural history of women," the proliferation of sex manuals and books on family hygiene, anatomical projects to sculpt antique bodies, the rage for physiognomic self-help books that taught readers to identify social and political "types" in post-revolutionary Paris, the use of physiological medicine as a literary genre, and the "mesmerist renaissance" with its charged debates over animal magnetism and somnambulism.

"In creating this reconstruction, Quinlan argues that the place and authority of medicine evolved, at least in part, out of an attempt to redress the acute sense of dislocation produced by the Revolution. Morbid Undercurrents exposes how medicine then became a subversive, radical, and ideologically charged force in French society" (publisher).

Catalog MetadataReference Information
Entry Number#14104
Permanent Linkhttps://staging.historyofmedicine.com/entry/16415
External URLmorbid-undercurrents-medical-subcultures-in-postrevolutionary-france

Geographic Context

Publication place: Ithaca, NY

Mentioned in annotation: Paris