Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book

Title Gender, health, and healing, 1250-1550 / edited by Sara Ritchey and Sharon Strocchia
Published Amsterdam : Amsterdam University Press, 2020

Copies

Description 1 online resource : illustrations
Series Premodern health, disease, and disability ; 3
Premodern health, disease and disability ; 3.
Contents Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- List of Figures and Tables -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- Introduction -- 1 Caring by the Hours. The Psalter as a Gendered Healthcare Technology -- 2 Female Saints as Agents of Female Healing. Gendered Practices and Patronage in the Cult of St. Cunigunde -- 3 Blood, Milk, and Breastbleeding. The Humoral Economy of Women's Bodies in Medieval Medicine -- 4 Care of the Breast in the Late Middle Ages. The Tractatus de passionibus mamillarum -- 5 Household Medicine for a Renaissance Court. Caterina Sforza's Ricettario Reconsidered -- 6. Understanding/Controlling the Female Body in Ten Recipes. Print and the Dissemination of Medical Knowledge about Women in the Early Sixteenth Century -- 7 Ubi non est mulier, ingemiscit egens? Gendered Perceptions of Care from the Thirteenth to Sixteenth Centuries -- 8 Domestic Care in the Sixteenth Century. Expectations, Experiences, and Practices from a Gendered Perspective -- 9 Bathtubs as a Healing Approach in Fifteenth-Century Ottoman Medicine -- 10 Gender, Old Age, and the Infertile Body in Medieval Medicine -- 11 Gender Segregation and the Possibility of Arabo-Galenic Gynecological Practice in the Medieval Islamic World -- Afterword. Healing Women and Women Healers -- Contributors -- Index
Summary This path-breaking collection offers an integrative model for understanding health and healing in Europe and the Mediterranean from 1250-1550. By foregrounding gender as an organizing principle of healthcare, the contributors challenge traditional binaries that ahistorically separate care from cure, medicine from religion, and domestic healing from fee-for-service medical exchanges. The essays collected here illuminate previously hidden and undervalued forms of healthcare and varieties of body knowledge produced and transmitted outside the traditional settings of university, guild, and academy. They draw on non-traditional sources-vernacular regimens, oral communications, religious and legal sources, images and objects-to reveal additional locations for producing body knowledge in households, religious communities, hospices, and public markets. Emphasizing cross-confessional and multi-linguistic exchange, the essays also reveal the multiple pathways for knowledge transfer in these centuries. The volume provides a synoptic view of how gender and cross-cultural exchange shaped medical theory and practice in later medieval and Renaissance societies
Analysis Disability
Gender
Health
Medicine
Religion
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed March 27, 2020)
Subject Medical care -- Europe -- History -- To 1500
Medicine -- Europe -- History -- To 1500
Women -- Health and hygiene -- Europe -- History -- To 1500
Middle Ages.
Health attitudes -- History -- To 1500
Healing -- History -- To 1500
Early history: c. 500 to c. 1450/1500.
History of medicine.
HISTORY -- Medieval.
Healing
Health attitudes
Medical care
Medicine
Middle Ages
Women -- Health and hygiene
Europe
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Ritchey, Sara Margaret, editor.
Strocchia, Sharon T., 1951- editor.
ISBN 9789048544462
9048544467