TY - JOUR
T1 - The Birth of Hirudiculture
T2 - Parisian Medicine, Leech Farming and the Transformation of Marshland in Nineteenth-Century France
AU - Kirk, Robert G.W.
AU - Pemberton, Neil
AU - Serviant-Fine, Thibaut
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 White Horse Press. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024/2/1
Y1 - 2024/2/1
N2 - This article examines health, human–animal relationships and environments within nineteenth-century France, focusing on Hirudo medicinalis, the medicinal leech. Drawing upon medical, environmental and ‘more than human histories’, we investigate how a ‘mania’ for bloodletting in the wake of Parisian medicine and what Michel Foucault has characterised as the ‘birth of the clinic’ produced a trade in leeches that threatened to push the species to extinction. While urban-educated naturalists, physicians, pharmacists, merchants and politicians worried over the scarcity of what was widely considered a commodity of national economic and medical importance, rural ‘leech gatherers’ quietly developed ways to breed leeches artificially. The outcome was hirudiculture: the farming of leeches on an industrial scale. We argue that the birth of hirudiculture was more than a practical and commercial response to the needs of medicine; it reflected and embodied similar shifts in knowledge and reveals the complex and diverse ways in which rural and urban environments, human and non-human relationships, have shaped each other in the pursuit of shared visions of health.
AB - This article examines health, human–animal relationships and environments within nineteenth-century France, focusing on Hirudo medicinalis, the medicinal leech. Drawing upon medical, environmental and ‘more than human histories’, we investigate how a ‘mania’ for bloodletting in the wake of Parisian medicine and what Michel Foucault has characterised as the ‘birth of the clinic’ produced a trade in leeches that threatened to push the species to extinction. While urban-educated naturalists, physicians, pharmacists, merchants and politicians worried over the scarcity of what was widely considered a commodity of national economic and medical importance, rural ‘leech gatherers’ quietly developed ways to breed leeches artificially. The outcome was hirudiculture: the farming of leeches on an industrial scale. We argue that the birth of hirudiculture was more than a practical and commercial response to the needs of medicine; it reflected and embodied similar shifts in knowledge and reveals the complex and diverse ways in which rural and urban environments, human and non-human relationships, have shaped each other in the pursuit of shared visions of health.
KW - Hirudiculture
KW - human–animal relationships
KW - leeches
KW - marshes
KW - medicine
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85183489531&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/a7a782e6-b2fe-3bbc-a6d2-93f102745bf4/
U2 - 10.3197/096734022X16384451127384
DO - 10.3197/096734022X16384451127384
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85183489531
SN - 0967-3407
VL - 30
SP - 77
EP - 103
JO - Environment and History
JF - Environment and History
IS - 1
ER -