Men of dreams and men of action: neurologists, neurosurgeons, and the performance of professional identity, 1920-1950
- PMID: 21551917
- DOI: 10.1353/bhm.2011.0020
Men of dreams and men of action: neurologists, neurosurgeons, and the performance of professional identity, 1920-1950
Abstract
In the 1930s and 1940s, neurosurgeons and clinical neurologists engaged in a fierce exchange on the scope of their specialties. Neurosurgeon Wilder Penfield's rhetoric of therapeutic superiority had a strong impact both on the Rockefeller Foundation's support for his institute and on the self-fashioning of neurologists. Neurologists articulated their identity in spirited performances at the meetings of specialist societies, their response shifting from a combative approach to a focus on internal organization. In light of the neurosurgeons' discourse, by the 1950s a new generation of neurologists created a revisionist narrative that inaccurately portrayed the clinical neurologists of the past as having been uninterested in therapeutics.
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