Gender Health and Healing 1250 1550

Gender  Health  and Healing  1250 1550
Author: Sara Ritchey,Sharon Strocchia
Publsiher: Amsterdam University Press
Total Pages: 331
Release: 2020-03-21
Genre: History
ISBN: 9789048544462

Download Gender Health and Healing 1250 1550 Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

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.

Caring for the Living Soul

Caring for the Living Soul
Author: Naama Cohen-Hanegbi
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 250
Release: 2017-05-08
Genre: History
ISBN: 9789004344662

Download Caring for the Living Soul Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Caring for the Living Soul identifies the fundamental role played by emotions in the development of learned medicine and in the formation of the social role of the "physicians of the body" in the western Mediterranean between 1200 and 1500.

Healers in the Making Students Physicians and Medical Education in Medieval Bologna 1250 1550

Healers in the Making  Students  Physicians  and Medical Education in Medieval Bologna  1250 1550
Author: Kira Robison
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2020-12-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 9789004444119

Download Healers in the Making Students Physicians and Medical Education in Medieval Bologna 1250 1550 Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

In Healers in the Making, Kira Robison investigates medical instruction at the University of Bologna using the lens of practical medicine, examining both the formation of medical authority and innovations in practical medical pedagogy during the late medieval period.

The Movement for Global Mental Health

The Movement for Global Mental Health
Author: Claudia Lang,William Sax
Publsiher: Amsterdam University Press
Total Pages: 347
Release: 2021-03-30
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 9789048550135

Download The Movement for Global Mental Health Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

In this volume, prominent anthropologists, public health physicians, and psychiatrists respond sympathetically but critically to the Movement for Global Mental Health (MGMH), which seeks to export psychiatry throughout the world. They question some of its fundamental assumptions: the idea that "mental disorders" can clearly be identified; that they are primarily of biological origin; that the world is currently facing an "epidemic" of them; that the most appropriate treatments for them normally involve psycho-pharmaceutical drugs; and that local or indigenous therapies are of little interest or importance for treating them. Instead, the contributors argue that labeling mental suffering as "illness" or "disorder" is often highly problematic; that the countries of South and Southeast Asia have abundant, though non- psychiatric, resources for dealing with it; that its causes are often social and biographical; and that many non-pharmacological therapies are effective for dealing with it. In short, they advocate a thoroughgoing mental health pluralism.

Abraham s Luggage

Abraham s Luggage
Author: Elizabeth Lambourn
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 319
Release: 2018-10-18
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781107173880

Download Abraham s Luggage Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

A single, unique document - a list of one merchant's baggage - is the starting point used to bring to life the twelfth-century Indian Ocean. Drawing connections between material culture, foodstuffs and the construction of identity, Lambourn examines notions of home and mobility at a key moment in world history.

Muslim Midwives

Muslim Midwives
Author: Avner Giladi
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2015
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781107054219

Download Muslim Midwives Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book reconstructs the role of midwives in medieval to early modern Islamic history through a careful reading of a wide range of classical and medieval Arabic sources. The author casts the midwife's social status in premodern Islam as a privileged position from which she could mediate between male authority in patriarchal society and female reproductive power within the family. This study also takes a broader historical view of midwifery in the Middle East by examining the tensions between learned medicine (male) and popular, medico-religious practices (female) from early Islam into the Ottoman period and addressing the confrontation between traditional midwifery and Western obstetrics in the first half of the nineteenth century.

Holy Matter

Holy Matter
Author: Sara Ritchey
Publsiher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 249
Release: 2014-04-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780801470950

Download Holy Matter Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

A magnificent proliferation of new Christ-centered devotional practices—including affective meditation, imitative suffering, crusade, Eucharistic cults and miracles, passion drama, and liturgical performance—reveals profound changes in the Western Christian temperament of the twelfth century and beyond. This change has often been attributed by scholars to an increasing emphasis on God’s embodiment in the incarnation and crucifixion of Christ. In Holy Matter, Sara Ritchey offers a fresh narrative explaining theological and devotional change by journeying beyond the human body to ask how religious men and women understood the effects of God’s incarnation on the natural, material world. She finds a remarkable willingness on the part of medieval Christians to embrace the material world—its trees, flowers, vines, its worms and wolves—as a locus for divine encounter. Early signs that perceptions of the material world were shifting can be seen in reformed communities of religious women in the twelfth-century Rhineland. Here Ritchey finds that, in response to the constraints of gendered regulations and spiritual ideals, women created new identities as virgins who, like the mother of Christ, impelled the world’s re-creation—their notion of the world’s re-creation held that God created the world a second time when Christ was born. In this second act of creation God was seen to be present in the physical world, thus making matter holy. Ritchey then traces the diffusion of this new religious doctrine beyond the Rhineland, showing the profound impact it had on both women and men in professed religious life, especially Franciscans in Italy and Carthusians in England. Drawing on a wide range of sources including art, liturgy, prayer, poetry, meditative guides, and treatises of spiritual instruction, Holy Matter reveals an important transformation in late medieval devotional practice, a shift from metaphor to material, from gazing on images of a God made visible in the splendor of natural beauty to looking at the natural world itself, and finding there God’s presence and promise of salvation.

Conserving health in early modern culture

Conserving health in early modern culture
Author: Sandra Cavallo,Tessa Storey
Publsiher: Manchester University Press
Total Pages: 310
Release: 2017-07-21
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781526113504

Download Conserving health in early modern culture Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Did early modern people care about their health? And what did it mean to lead a healthy life in Italy and England? Through a range of textual evidence, images and material artefacts Conserving health in early modern culture documents the profound impact which ideas about healthy living had on daily practices as well as on intellectual life and the material world in this period. In both countries staying healthy was understood as depending on the careful management of the six ‘Non-Naturals’: the air one breathed, food and drink, excretions, sleep, exercise and repose, and the ‘passions of the soul’. To a close scrutiny, however, models of prevention differed considerably in Italy and England, reflecting country-specific cultural, political and medical contexts and different confessional backgrounds. The following two chapters are available open access on a CC-BY-NC-ND license here: http://www.oapen.org/search?identifier=633180 3 'Ordering the infant': caring for newborns in early modern England - Leah Astbury 4 'She sleeps well and eats an egg': convalescent care in early modern England - Hannah Newton