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Research ArticleArticles

Head of a Serpent, a Pinch of Rue

Women, Indigenous Pharmacology, and the Patriarchy of French Colonizing Science in Morocco

Ellen Amster
History of Pharmacy and Pharmaceuticals, July 2022, 63 (2) 195-222; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/hopp.63.2.195
Ellen Amster
Hannah Unit in the History of Medicine and Medical Humanities at McMaster University;
Roles: Jason A. Hannah Chair in the History of Medicine and Director
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  • For correspondence: amstere{at}mcmaster.ca
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In this issue

History of Pharmacy and Pharmaceuticals: 63 (2)
History of Pharmacy and Pharmaceuticals
Vol. 63, Issue 2
25 Jul 2022
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Head of a Serpent, a Pinch of Rue
Ellen Amster
History of Pharmacy and Pharmaceuticals Jul 2022, 63 (2) 195-222; DOI: 10.3368/hopp.63.2.195

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Head of a Serpent, a Pinch of Rue
Ellen Amster
History of Pharmacy and Pharmaceuticals Jul 2022, 63 (2) 195-222; DOI: 10.3368/hopp.63.2.195
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  • Article
    • Abstract
    • “My Mother Prepared Those for Us”: Galenic Pharmacology and Women’s Medical Mediation in Morocco
    • Le Rite et L’Outil: French Pharmaceutical Bioprospecting in “Women’s Sorcery”
    • The Frenchwoman as Ethnographer of Moroccan Women’s Pharmacology
    • Crime and Female Villainy in the Toxicology Laboratory of Dr. Charnot
    • Conclusion
    • Footnotes
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Keywords

  • French colonialism
  • traditional pharmacopeia
  • women’s history
  • Moroccan healing
  • gender
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