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"'That Dreadful Distemper': Smallpox, Quakers, and Inoculation in Enlightenment Britain," Huntington Library Quarterly 85, no. 3 (2022): 496-517.
Journal article

"'That Dreadful Distemper': Smallpox, Quakers, and Inoculation in Enlightenment Britain," Huntington Library Quarterly 85, no. 3 (2022): 496-517.

Elizabeth J Bouldin
The Huntington Library quarterly, Vol.85(3), pp.497-516
Autumn 2022

Abstract

eighteenthcentury medicine religious views of disease John Coakley Lettsom John Woolman Sophia Hume
Quakers were early adopters and promoters of inoculation, but the procedure became a contested issue among Friends. This study analyzes eighteenth-century Quaker writings on inoculation, which emphasized both human reason and divine revelation. Highlighting the diversity of ideas about the meaning of smallpox and the value of inoculation, the essay demonstrates how debates over inoculation drew Quakers into broader discourses surrounding religion, disease, and medicine in Enlightenment Britain.
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