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Social History of Medicine Advance Access originally published online on April 5, 2007
Social History of Medicine 2007 20(1):73-89; doi:10.1093/shm/hkm032
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for the Social History of Medicine. All rights reserved

Raising a Nation of ‘Good Animals’: The New Health Society and Health Education Campaigns in Interwar Britain

Ina Zweiniger-Bargielowska*

* University of Illinois, Chicago, Department of History (MC 198), 913 University Hall, 601 South Morgan Street, Chicago, Illinois 60607–7109, USA. E-mail: inazb{at}uic.edu


   Abstract

The New Health Society, founded by Sir William Arbuthnot Lane in 1925, aimed to convert a ‘rapidly degenerating community’ into a ‘nation composed of healthy, vigorous members’. An analysis of this society, which combined social Darwinist and eugenicist rhetoric with utopian body practices and progressive gender ideology, deepens our understanding of interwar public health debates. The Society saw the bowels as central to health and considered constipation the root cause of many ills of civilisation. Its critique of civilisation, framed in terms of a valorisation of ‘native’ culture, nevertheless embraced modern science, technology and mass media. The Society was not hereditarian and saw health education as the key to race regeneration. Health and happiness were within the reach of all whose hygienic regimen included a high-fibre diet, outdoor exercise and sun-bathing, along with birth control and men's dress reform. Despite its idiosyncrasy, the Society's understanding of health as a personal responsibility and duty of citizenship, which sidestepped the question of poverty and inequality, resembled the views of Sir George Newman, the Chief Medical Officer. This article discusses the New Health Society's ideology, focusing on politics, race and gender, and locates the Society within the wider context of official health education campaigns in interwar Britain.

Keywords: New Health Society; eugenics; health education; constipation; diet; civilisation; modernity; race; gender; men's dress reform


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