Folk Medicine

Description

A study of folk medicine, based on information provided by informants living in three West Yorkshire villages - Hartshead, Roberttown and Clifton. The first of eight chapters provides an introduction to the study of folk medicine, and suggests obstacles in such study (the amorphous body of material, diachronic versus synchronic, scale and geographical spread of any survey). Chapter Two describes the origins and history of folk medicine, whilst the third chapter covers preventive measures, including charms. Chapters Four to Seven deal in more depth with individual cures for particular ailments affecting parts of the body - skin disorders, aches, pains and strains, throat and chest conditions and internal disorders. The final chapter considers animal cures. Two appendices provide a number of beliefs collected during the fieldwork, some with a definite connection with folk medicine, others relating to good and bad luck, and a lists of observations on folk remedies made by a qualified doctor.

Metadata

Identifier z3qcrcvy
IRN 410163
Class Mark LAVC/SRP/2/127
Level File
Type of Record Archives - ISAD(G)
Peristent Link http://prototype1.library.leeds.ac.uk/z3qcrcvy
Collection(s) Leeds Archive of Vernacular Culture
Category Archive
Parent Record Undergraduate Dissertations
Creator(s) Crowther, S
Date 1964
Size and Medium 62 bound typed leaves.

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