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Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
A Note on the Text
Introduction
1 Family Matters
2 Letters Home
3 The Young Physiologist
4 War’s Awful Harvest
5 Wind and Tide
6 Pandora’s Box
7 The Apple or the Rose
8 The Literary Physician
9 Combat Zones
10 Great Doctor, Poet, and Salmon Killer
11 Winter’s Sorrow
12 The New Century
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Nancy Cervetti is Professor of English at Avila University.
“Cervetti has produced an elegantly written, incredibly detailed,
and impressively comprehensive narrative of Mitchell’s journey from
the insecure son of an overbearing father to the highly esteemed
and influential researcher and clinician in physiology and
neurology to a kind of medical public intellectual and
literat[us].”—Richard A. Meckel Journal of American History
“[S. Weir Mitchell, 1829–1914] is the first comprehensive,
postfeminist biography of Mitchell. . . . Cervetti’s book is sure
to become the biography of record.”—David G. Schuster Pennsylvania
Magazine of History and Biography
“This book is the first modern, reliable biography of S. Weir
Mitchell based on thorough research and careful, scholarly use of a
wide range of primary sources. The research and interpretation here
are highly original. Nancy Cervetti's biography uses new
information about Mitchell to provide a complex and fascinating
interpretation of his life, his work, and his significance to
American literature and culture.”—Gregory Eiselein, Kansas State
University
“Nancy Cervetti shows us the ‘whole’ S. Weir Mitchell as he
revealed himself through his unpublished autobiography and copious
correspondence. She has mined a veritable mountain of primary
sources, including Mitchell’s scientific papers, and elegantly
integrated them all into this beautifully written biography.
Cervetti’s original approach to Mitchell’s work provides readers
with a treasure trove of information about his family life,
research career, literary aspirations, and travels. The precious
primary source materials shine like gems in the setting of
Cervetti’s helpful historical context.”—Lisa A. Long, North Central
College
“The name of Silas Weir Mitchell shades discussions of medicine,
feminist literature, and the social, scientific, and literary
conversations at the dawn of the twentieth century. Over a half
century has elapsed since the last substantive biography of a man
who ‘built a powerhouse of a life,’ as Nancy Cervetti describes
Mitchell. She has written a stunning, holistic survey of Mitchell’s
work from Civil War neurology to his insights in psychiatry and
hysteria, his popular literature, and his antagonism toward women’s
rights. Cervetti’s fascinating biography communicates Mitchell’s
‘keen sense of life as a performance’ and will inspire new
scholarship and appeal to a readership as broad as Mitchell’s own
reading publics.”—Robert Hicks, Mütter Museum and Historical
Medical Library, The College of Physicians of Philadelphia
“You will find many Mitchells in Nancy Cervetti’s book:
rambunctious boy, unfocused youth, budding physician, committed
experimentalist, pioneering neurologist, bibliophile, poet,
novelist, socialite, fisherman, medical graybeard, feted celebrity,
and cultural Polonius. The threads Cervetti uses to weave the
fabric of his life are his need to write and his attitude toward
women. They stitch together a fascinating nineteenth-century life,
with its successes, failures, and contradictions.”—Charles
Greifenstein, American Philosophical Society
“[Nancy Cervetti’s] product, a well-organized, polished, scholarly
work, is a great contribution to American medical history. . . .
Like one of Mitchell’s best novels, this biography deserves a wide
readership.”—I. Richman Choice
“Cervetti has given readers a freshly researched, beautifully
written portrait of a vital figure who, for better and worse,
towered over his age.”—Helen L. Horowitz Bulletin of the History of
Medicine
“Cervetti’s professional, personal, political, and psychological
analysis of S. Weir Mitchell provides insight into the social and
political climate of the nineteenth century and serves as a useful
case study within the larger context of American medicine and
culture.”—Savannah L. Williamson Social History of Medicine
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