Parker, Sarah Elizabeth (Author)
Contrary Signs: Categorizing Illness in Early Modern Literature investigates the relationship between particular experience and universal categorization as represented in literary and medical writings from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. In early modern Europe, the disciplinary boundaries that now divide the humanities and the sciences had not yet been established, and the debates over the relative importance of an individual's experience with illness and the priority of classification extended into disciplines that we would now consider literary. Contrary Signs traces the extensive literary engagement with medicine's conflicting aims: the growing concern to name and classify diseases and the palpable fact of the patient's particularity. Following literary medical works from the early sixteenth-century writings on syphilis through the late seventeenth-century corpus of Thomas Browne, I identify two key developments that influenced the debate over the particular patient's position within the study of theoretical medicine. First, the move towards introspection created more narrative space for the valorization of particularity. This development was connected to the growing interest in Hippocratic medicine evidenced by physician-authors like François Rabelais and Girolamo Cardano, and its import for autobiography can be seen in the writings of Cardano and French essayist Michel de Montaigne. The second factor influencing these debates over categorization is the development of individual spirituality, fostered by the growth of Protestantism. The work of John Donne and Thomas Browne evidences the opportunities for self-evaluation and diagnosis that such spiritually inflected writings on medical topics allowed. Contrary Signs argues that the joint emphasis on autobiographical perspectives and the privileging of a personal relationship to the divine in early modern literary texts posed a significant challenge to the contemporaneous ascendancy of biological classification in medical writings. As such, Contrary Signs offers an alternate narrative to the histories of science that trace a progressive movement towards increasingly rigorous models of classification, traditionally seen to culminate in the eighteenth century with the work of Linnaeus. While classification was central to early modern medicine, the influence of autobiographical elements and the rising fascination with the individual spirituality encouraged by Protestantism provide an important counterpoint to the impulse towards classification.
...MoreDescription Cited in Dissertation Abstracts International-A 74/04(E), Oct 2013. Proquest Document ID: 1239261498.
Article
Tagarelli, Antonio;
Piro, Anna;
(2014)
On the Illness of Politian (Agnolo Ambrogini, 1454--1494): Syphilis At Its Identification in Europe
Article
Massimi, Marina;
(2012)
A descrição da complexão corporal em escritos autobiográficos da Idade Moderna
Book
Epifanio Ferdinando;
Amedeo Elio Distante;
(2020)
Cento storie. Osservazioni e casi medici
Chapter
Cesare S. Maffioli;
(2015)
Not a Limit of Art but of Nature: Cardano and Galileo on the Suction Lift of Water
Thesis
Randall, Lesa Beth;
(1999)
Representations of Syphilis in Sixteenth-Century French Literature
Chapter
Rees, Emma L. E.;
(2010)
Cordelia's Can't: Rhetorics of Reticence and (Dis)ease in King Lear
Chapter
Spates, William;
(2010)
Shakespeare and the Irony of Early Modern Disease Metaphor and Metonymy
Book
Healy, Margaret;
(2002)
Fictions of Disease in Early Modern England: Bodies, Plagues, and Politics
Article
Paugh, Katherine;
(2014)
Yaws, Syphilis, Sexuality, and the Circulation of Medical Knowledge in the British Caribbean and the Atlantic World
Book
Noelle Gallagher;
(2019)
Itch, Clap, Pox: Venereal Disease in the Eighteenth-Century Imagination
Book
Eugenia Tognotti;
(2006)
L'altra faccia di Venere. La sifilide dalla prima età moderna all'avvento dell'Aids (XV-XX sec.)
Article
Iommi Echeverría, Virginia;
(2010)
Girolamo Fracastoro y la invención de la sífilis
Article
Winterbottom, Anna;
(2015)
Of the China Root: A Case Study of the Early Modern Circulation of Materia Medica
Thesis
Guillemet, Julien Won Woo;
(2011)
Games of Chance and Libertinage
Book
Glaze, Florence Eliza;
Nance, Brian;
(2011)
Between Text and Patient: The Medical Enterprise in Medieval and Early Modern Europe
Thesis
Culyba, Rebecca J.;
(2008)
Classification and the Social Construction of Disease in Medical Systems: A Historical Comparison of Syphilis and HIV/AIDS in the United States
Article
Mann, Jenny C.;
(2015)
Pygmalion's Wax: “Fruitful Knowledge” in Bacon and Montaigne
Thesis
Moshenska, Joseph;
(2011)
“Feeling Pleasures”: The Sense of Touch in Renaissance England
Article
Stefano Gensini;
(2017)
"E io in Napoli vidi un cane polacco…": ancora sui linguaggi animali, da Gesner a Campanella
Book
Brown, Kevin;
(2011)
Poxed and Scurvied: The Story of Sickness and Health at Sea
Be the first to comment!