The machine in the garden: the compressed-air batch and therapeutic landscapes in the 19th century
Histories of climatic medicine have emphasised the allure of the natural landscape as a therapeutic space in the nineteenth century: health resorts set in the rolling hills, spa towns selling healing waters, and seaside towns keen to capitalise on their “ozone-laden” air. This paper addresses an artificially-constructed therapeutic environment that both capitalised upon, and distanced itself from, this naturalness: the compressed-air batch. In taking the “pure” air of the country resort and compressing it, the bath’s advocates drew on established discourses of climatic medicine while simultaneously altering that environment to treat patients with a hybrid form of air.
As physical objects, compressed-air baths were also difficult to reconcile with the landscape around them, and it is this incongruence between technology and natural environment that forms the central theme of this paper.

Coffee is available from 14.00
Date: 13 June 2016, 14:15 (Monday, 8th week, Trinity 2016)
Venue: 47 Banbury Road, 47 Banbury Road OX2 6PE
Venue Details: Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine, Seminar Room
Speaker: Jennifer Wallis (University of Oxford)
Organising department: Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine
Organiser: Dr Atsuko Naono (Welcome Unit for the History of Medicine)
Organiser contact email address: atsuko.naono@wuhmo.ox.ac.uk
Booking required?: Not required
Audience: Members of the University only
Editor: Laura Spence