 |
|
 |
|
Chinese Acupuncture |
|
George Soulie De Morant
|
|
One who has written these new truths into the great immortal
book of human potentials, thus wresting from the vastness of time
a morsel of permanence, cannot be said to have lived and worked
in vain.
--
Professor Paul Mériel
Chinese Acupuncture, Soulié de Morant's masterwork, is
the most detailed study of acupuncture in a Western language.
-- Redwing Reviews
George Soulié de Morant went to China at the turn of the
century, where he served as French Consul for Shanghai and as a
judge in the French Concession in Shanghai. He remained in China
for almost two decades, becoming well accepted by the Chinese people,
and gaining entrance to the highest circles of Chinese society.
Although his life's work was to be acupuncture, his literary output
was voluminous and covered every aspect of Chinese life. He was
a man of great talent, and became the only European to be recognized
as a Chinese doctor by the Chinese themselves.
Soulié de Morant returned
to France in 1917, where he began actively promoting acupuncture
among the medical professionals. His published articles attracted
the attention of two French physicians, who invited him to work
with them in their hospital departments. The first two volumes of
the present text were published circa 1940, and became the basis
for his nomination for a Nobel Prize in 1950. Just before his death
in 1955, he completed Acupuncture Chinoise, the work which
lead to the first successful European acculturation of acupuncture
and laid the foundation for the modern practice of acupuncture in
Europe.
The text is massive, containing nearly 1,000 densely but readably
organized oversize pages. Volume One of the text's five parts describes
the energetics of acupuncture; Volume Two, the application of those
energetics; Volume Three, their relation to physiology. Volume Four
summarizes the meridians and points, organizing information around
the classical concepts of energy circulation, so that the reader
perceives a clinical range much greater than that found in more
recent English-language texts.
|
 |
Volume Five, a detailed treatment repertoire, is still the largest
of its kind in a Western language. Meticulously compiled from works
including the Zhen Jiu Da Cheng, the Zhen Jiu Yi Xue, the Yi Xue
Ru Men, and the Zhen Jiu Yi Zi, which are the epitome of Chinese
clinical experience, illnesses are presented as energetic categories,
and as organ, function, and area groups. Then, within each of these
categories, conditions are precisely defined and finely differentiated.
This level of practical detail has been achieved since only in specialized
sections of technical works, but never again at this scale.
The book is universally recognized not only as a unique and historic
achievement but also as one of the best, most detailed, and most
practical of clinical texts. Soulié de Morant was the first
and finest advocate of seeking and treating the root of illness
in the disruption of an individuals harmony with nature. He was
the first to argue that there was no need to emphasize the incompatibilities
between Chinese and Western medicines, and the first to propose
hundreds of practical correlations with science. In many ways,
he anticipated modern Western and Eastern needs by showing biomedicine
how to expand its clinical gaze to include the qualities and relationships
discovered by Chinese physicians.
Thus, Chinese Acupuncture has conveyed the ideals of the Chinese
medical arts to Western doctors and acupuncturists, capturing
the imagination of an entire generation of physicians and continuing
to inspire those who write or practice today.
Publication Date: September, 1994
Paperback; 896 pages. 8.5 x 11, $125.00
Index; Annotated Bibliography.
ISBN 0-912111-31-3
Order from our distributor
Redwing Book Company
44 Linden St. Brookline MA 02445
Toll Free: 800 873 3946
Canada: 888 873 3947
Other: 617 738 1235
Fax: 738-4620
P.O. Box 1037
202 Bendix Drive
Taos, New Mexico 87571
505 758 7758
|
 |