Book ID: CBB001231099

Wounds, Flesh, and Metaphor in Seventeenth-Century England (2009)

unapi

Covington, Sarah (Author)


Palgrave Macmillan


Publication Date: 2009
Physical Details: x + 252 pp.; bibl.; index
Language: English

Reviewed By

Review Gilbert, Ruth (2011) Review of "Wounds, Flesh, and Metaphor in Seventeenth-Century England". American Historical Review (pp. 220-220). unapi

Review Brady, Andrea (2010) Review of "Wounds, Flesh, and Metaphor in Seventeenth-Century England". Renaissance Quarterly (p. 992). unapi

Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001231099/

Similar Citations

Book Noble, Louise Christine; (2011)
Medicinal Cannibalism in Early Modern English Literature and Culture (/isis/citation/CBB001231015/)

Book Kerwin, William; (2005)
Beyond the Body: The Boundaries of Medicine and English RenaissanceDrama (/isis/citation/CBB000720434/)

Article Machline, Vera Cecilia; (2013)
The Role of Plauto in Richard Blackmore's Conceptions about the Spleen (/isis/citation/CBB001320173/)

Book Magnanini, Suzanne; (2008)
Fairy-Tale Science: Monstrous Generation in the Tales of Straparola and Basile (/isis/citation/CBB001230840/)

Book Read, Kirk D.; (2011)
Birthing Bodies in Early Modern France: Stories of Gender and Reproduction (/isis/citation/CBB001024742/)

Book Totaro, Rebecca Carol Noel; (2010)
The Plague in Print: Essential Elizabethan Sources, 1558--1603 (/isis/citation/CBB001250119/)

Thesis Orlemanski, Julie; (2010)
Symptomatic Subjects: Diagnosis, Narrative, and Embodiment in Middle English Literature (/isis/citation/CBB001561049/)

Chapter Rees, Emma L. E.; (2010)
Cordelia's Can't: Rhetorics of Reticence and (Dis)ease in King Lear (/isis/citation/CBB001253084/)

Article Roychoudhury, Suparna; (2012)
Forswearing Fever: Medicine, Materialism, and Shakespeare's Sonnet 147 (/isis/citation/CBB001200735/)

Book Totaro, Rebecca Carol Noel; Gilman, Ernest B.; (2011)
Representing the Plague in Early Modern England (/isis/citation/CBB001231050/)

Thesis Swain, David Wesley; (2004)
Language of the Soul: Galenism and the Medical Disciplines in Elyot, Huarte, and Shakespeare (/isis/citation/CBB001561821/)

Book Gentile da Foligno (pseudo); Girolamo di Viterbo; Evangelista Bartoli; Edoardo D'Angelo; (2019)
Le terme di Viterbo tra Medioevo e Rinascimento. La trattatistica in latino: pseudo Gentile da Foligno, Girolamo di Viterbo, Evangelista Bartoli (/isis/citation/CBB832944506/)

Article López-Muñoz, Francisco; Álamo, Cecilio; García-García, Pilar; (2007)
“Than all the herbs described by Dioscorides...”: The Traces of Andrés Laguna in the Works of Cervantes (/isis/citation/CBB000850022/)

Thesis Corbin, Nancy Margaret; (2011)
Heinrich von Kleist and Enlightenment Medicine (/isis/citation/CBB001567321/)

Book Taavitsainen, Irma; Pahta, Päivi; (2011)
Medical Writing in Early Modern English (/isis/citation/CBB001220217/)

Book Park, Katharine; (2006)
Secrets of Women: Gender, Generation, and the Origins of Human Dissection (/isis/citation/CBB000773343/)

Article Schleiner, Winfried; (2000)
Early Modern Controversies about the One-Sex Model (/isis/citation/CBB000660471/)

Authors & Contributors
Totaro, Rebecca Carol Noel
Bartoli, Evangelista
D'Angelo, Edoardo
Bigotti, Fabrizio
Viterbo (di), Girolamo
da Foligno, Gentile
Journals
Renaissance Quarterly
Pharmacy in History
Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies
Circumscribere: International Journal for the History of Science
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
University of Massachusetts Amherst
University of California, Davis
Zone Books
University of Washington Press
University of Toronto Press
Concepts
Medicine
Medicine and literature
Human body
Medicine and culture
Disease and diseases
Physiology
People
Shakespeare, William
Milton, John
Vesalius, Andreas
Spenser, Edmund
Plautus, Titus Maccius
Laguna, Andrés de
Time Periods
Renaissance
16th century
17th century
15th century
Early modern
Medieval
Places
England
Italy
Germany
France
Great Britain
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment