0 the scientific study of bacteria, especially those that cause disease --
Few topics in the history of medicine and the sciences enjoy a reputation comparable to the rise of microbiology and bacteriology in the nineteenth century.
A successful science such as bacteriology was under enormous pressure of popularization in the 1880s and 1890s.
His choice of terminology, however, does indicate a crucial transition in the development of political language borrowing from bacteriology and parasitology.
A second important feature of popular bacteriology was that the semantic field contained no appropriate terms to describe a pathological process.
On the other side, on his way into the past, the author hesitates for a moment over the weight of sciences such as bacteriology.
The counting and detection of bacteria are important aspects of bacteriology.
In terms of theme, the range is quite broad - psychiatry, bacteriology, anthropology, psychology, public health and archaeology comprise the areas of science and medicine covered.
The novel ways in which physiology or bacteriology envisioned the human body and its pathologies did not easily translate into practice.