Thesis ID: CBB001567358

Contrary Signs: Categorizing Illness in Early Modern Literature (2012)

unapi

Parker, Sarah Elizabeth (Author)


Melehy, Hassan
Floyd-Wilson, Mary
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Barbour, Reid
Melehy, Hassan
Floyd-Wilson, Mary
Matchinske, Megan
Wolfe, Jessica L
Barbour, Reid
Matchinske, Megan


Publication Date: 2012
Edition Details: Advisor: Wolfe, Jessica L; Committee Members: Barbour, Reid, Melehy, Hassan, Floyd-Wilson, Mary, Matchinske, Megan.
Physical Details: 264 pp.
Language: English

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.

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Description Cited in Dissertation Abstracts International-A 74/04(E), Oct 2013. Proquest Document ID: 1239261498.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001567358/

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Authors & Contributors
Rafael Mandressi
Ferdinando, Epifanio
Portulano, Maria Luisa
Distante, Amedeo Elio
Kästner, Alexander
Tagarelli, Antonio
Journals
Medical History
Journal of Medical Biography
Journal of Global History
História, Ciências, Saúde---Manguinhos
Filosofia e História da Biologia
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
Publishers
S4M Edizioni
University of California, Santa Barbara
Palgrave
Franco Angeli
Brill
Bloomsbury Publishing
Concepts
Disease and diseases
Syphilis
Medicine
Science and literature
Medicine and literature
Infectious diseases
People
Shakespeare, William
Montaigne, Michel Eyquem de
Cardano, Girolamo
Ferdinando, Epifanio
Poliziano, Angelo Ambrogini
Vico, Giovanni Battista
Time Periods
16th century
Early modern
17th century
18th century
15th century
Renaissance
Places
Europe
England
Italy
France
Atlantic world
Venice (Italy)
Institutions
Jesuits (Society of Jesus)
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