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Locating the late Victorian spectacle retail market Locating the late Victorian spectacle retail market
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The certificated and qualified dispenser The certificated and qualified dispenser
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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4 The limits of professionalism: medical practitioners, opticians and popular responses to sight loss, 1880–1904
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Published:September 2023
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Abstract
This chapter shines light on how mass production of spectacles expanded the spectacle market outside medical control. It analyses the tensions and shared concerns that emerged between opticians and medical men concerning professional jurisdiction over an increasingly lucrative market. It draws upon material culture and a broad and extensive range of archival and digital sources: advertisements, medical texts, medical journals, The Optician, opticians’ texts, newspapers and periodicals. It argues that the 1890s were an intense period of inter- and intra-professional debate between ophthalmologists and opticians. In exploring popular responses to sight loss, it demonstrates that, while opticians were effective in maintaining their position as experts, both opticians’ and medical practitioners’ authority as experts was challenged by the increasing availability of spectacles amongst miscellaneous high street retailers and conflicting popular advice. Spectacles were a uniquely common and ubiquitous assistive device and popular beliefs that the dispenser did not need to possess professional expertise continued to circulate. Opticians and ophthalmologists increasingly collaborated to regulate dispensing practices against a backlash and popular demand for cheap or high-end stylish frames on the high street that paid little consideration to their efficacy or functionality.
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