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Quack, Quack, Quack:

The Sellers of Nostrums in Prints, Posters, Books and Ephemera: An Exhibition on the Frequently Excessive and Flamboyant Seller of Nostrums As Shown in Prints, Posters, Caricatures, Books, Pamphlets, Advertisements, and Other Graphic Arts Over the Last Five Centuries
Front Cover
William H. Helfand, Grolier Club
1 Review
Winterhouse Editions, 2002 - Art - 252 pages
This authoritative and entertaining exhibition catalog explores the long visual history of a rich and neglected topic: medical quackery, from the itinerant seller of nostrums four centuries ago to the unsolicited spam of today's internet. Presenting a broad variety of material--prints by William Hogarth and Honor 9 Daumier, posters by Jules Ch 9ret and Maxfield Parrish, and books by H. G. Wells and S. Weir Mitchell--"Quack, Quack, Quack offers a delightful look at the remarkable artistry and elaborate language quacks used to peddle their wares: lavish pronouncements, excessive postures, and imaginatively exalted therapeutic promises.
The earliest quacks, we see, dressed elaborately, inflated their credentials, and embraced an extravagant vocabulary to market their panaceas, at times claiming their pills and salves would cure all disease. They were succeeded in short order by the makers of proprietary medicines, many of whom adopted quack-style promotional methods while introducing new ones of their own. These vendors advertised widely--often with celebrity testimonials--publishing broadsides, posters, pamphlets, and manifestos to amplify their claims.
And though recent strides in medicine mean that most people avoid quacks, and efforts have been made to rid society of patent-medicine makers, the quack survives to the present day, promising to make us all thinner, better-looking, healthier, or more sexually potent. This catalogue--and the 2002 New York City Grolier Club exhibition it originally accompanied--are fascinating reminders of how long such promises have been with us, and in how many unique and scintillating ways they've been made.

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Review: Quack, Quack, Quack: The Sellers of Nostrums in Prints, Posters, Ephemera, & Books

User Review  - James Schmidt - Goodreads

"I can advertise dish water, and sell it, just as well as an article of merit," a 19th-century newspaper copy writer once boasted. "It is all in the advertising." As some one who is interested in ... Read full review

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About the author (2002)

William H. Helfand is the author of five books as well as a number of articles on the history of pharmacy, and on prints, caricatures, posters and ephemera relating to pharmacy and medicine. In recent years, he has curated several exhibitions on prints, drawings and photographs relating to pharmacy, dentistry and nursing in the Ars Medica Collection at the Philadelphia Museum of Art

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