Paul Carton

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Paul Joseph Edmond Carton (12 March 1875 – 20 October 1947) was a French physician and practitioner of vegetarianism.

Carton was born in Meaux. He received his medical education at the Ecole de Medecine de Paris.[1] In 1903, Carton suffered from tuberculosis. He became disillusioned with the medical establishment and took interest in alternative medicine and vegetarianism which he claimed helped recover his health.[1] Carton was a vegetarian and promoted "naturist vegetarianism".[1]

Naturist vegetarianism was a dieting and health system that involved abstinence from drugs, meat, processed foods and alcohol.[1] It embraced natural hygienic principles, gymnastics, hydrotherapy and prayer. Carton was influenced by Hippocrates and his conception of naturism was entirely opposed to nudism which he equated with moral degradation. He advocated asceticism in relation to clothing, drinking, eating and sex.[1]

Carton was a Catholic and held anti-materialist views. His ideas about naturist medicine were influenced by Catholicism and vitalist philosophy. His dietary principles became known as Cartonianism. There was a religious element to his dietary principles. He believed in original sin, hell and the Christian sacrifice was central to his medical worldview. He held the idea that health should be earned and that pain had a purifying role. Disease was the result of violation of physical and mental laws.[1]

Carton was opposed to the overfeeding of patients. He believed that strict control of eating would allow patients to be cured. He campaigned against the consumption of butter, meat and white bread. He operated a sanatorium at Brevannes, near Paris. The sanatorium had a laboratory for testing his dietary and hydropathic ideas.[1]

In 1921, he created the Societe Naturiste Francaise' (French Naturist Society) and in 1922 the journal La Revue Naturiste (The Naturist Review).[1]

The best-selling novel Corps et âmes (Bodies and Souls), written by French writer Maxence Van der Meersch and published in 1943, was inspired by the character and medical doctrine of Carton.

Selected publications[]

  • La Tuberculose par arthritisme. Étude Clinique. Traitement rationnel et pratique (1911)
  • Les Trois Aliments meurtriers: la viande, le sucre, l'alcool (1912), translated The Three Lethal Foods: Meat, Sugar and Alcohol
  • Consumption Doomed (translated by Dorothy Richardson, 1913)
  • Some Popular Foodstuffs Exposed (translated by Dorothy Richardson, 1913)
  • La Cure de soleil et d'exercices (1917)
  • Traité de médecine, d'alimentation et d'hygiène naturistes (1920)
  • Le Dialogue de la santé (1922)
  • Le Naturisme dans Sénèque (1922)
  • Bienheureux Ceux qui souffrent (1923)
  • L'Essentiel de la doctrine d'Hippocrate (1923)
  • La Cuisine simple (1925), (translated by Elizabeth Lucas as Simple Vegetarian Cookery, 1931)
  • Le Faux Naturisme de Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1931)

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Ouédraogo, Arouna P. (2001). Food and the Purification of Society: Dr Paul Carton and Vegetarianism in Interwar France. The Society for the Social History of Medicine 14 (2): 223-245.
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