The life and pioneering work of Louis-Victor Marcé (1828-1864) The social history of medicine
The life and pioneering work of Louis-Victor Marcé (1828-1864) The social history of medicine

The life and pioneering work of Louis-Victor Marcé (1828-1864)

The social history of medicine

The publication in 2012 by Éditions Glyphe of The Life and Pioneering Work of Louis-Victor Marcé answered the need for a study of Marcé's life and work. The Marcé Society had long pointed to the dearth of information on Marcé's life and the need to situate Marcé's magisterial Treatise on the Madness of Pregnant Women in the context of Marcé's entire scholarly production.  The thorough investigation conducted by the late Thérèse Lempérière (1925-2013) and Jean-Pierre Luauté brings to light for the first time the facts surrounding Marcé's tragic death and sheds additional light on Marcé's genius as clinician and pioneer in underexplored fields of pathology.  

ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Thérèse Lempérière (1925-2013) was a Professor of Psychiatry in Paris where she worked with Jean Delay and Pierre Deniker and contributed to the launching of neuroleptics; she was the author of many training books among witch Psychiatry of the adults.
Jean-Pierre Luauté neuropsychiatrist, worked for 30 years in a state hospital in the department of la Drôme, he is interested in the study of the borders between psychiatry ans neurology and by the history of these specialities.

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