Article ID: CBB291404582

Masculine Old Women or Feminine Old Men? Rethinking Gender and the Ageing Body in Early Modern English Medicine (2023)

unapi

This article challenges the almost universal historiographical claim that women's bodies were thought to become increasingly masculine as they aged in early modern English medicine, especially after menopause. It is not surprising that this ‘masculinisation hypothesis’ has endured with very little critical appraisal, as there have been few in-depth studies into medical conceptions of ageing womanhood. Drawing on c.140 English vernacular medical and popular health texts published between 1570 and 1730, this article interrogates and refutes key claims for the corporeal ‘manliness’ of old women. Instead, it argues that while medicine undoubtedly depicted old women and men as growing closer in bodily constitution as they aged, this generic ageing constitution had more ‘feminine’ corporeal attributes than ‘masculine’. Exploring references to ‘effeminated’ old men within medical books, it then questions the impact of these medical gender associations within wider cultural contexts.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB291404582/

Similar Citations

Article Alison M Moore; (2018)
Conceptual layers in the invention of menopause in nineteenth-century France (/isis/citation/CBB015280131/)

Article Watkins, Elizabeth Siegel; (2008)
Medicine, Masculinity, and the Disappearance of Male Menopause in the 1950s (/isis/citation/CBB000930669/)

Article Houck, Judith A.; (2003)
“What Do These Women Want?” Feminist Responses to Feminine Forever, 1963--1980 (/isis/citation/CBB000630194/)

Chapter Vita Fortunati; (2003)
La vecchiaia in Shakespeare fra mito e scienza (/isis/citation/CBB558765478/)

Article Jasen, Patricia; (2011)
Menopause and Historical Constructions of Cancer Risk (/isis/citation/CBB001250781/)

Book Houck, Judith A.; (2006)
Hot and Bothered: Women, Medicine, and Menopause in Modern America (/isis/citation/CBB000600586/)

Article Watkins, Elizabeth Siegel; (2007)
The Medicalisation of Male Menopause in America (/isis/citation/CBB000772508/)

Book James M. Bromley; Will Stockton; (2013)
Sex before Sex: Figuring the Act in Early Modern England (/isis/citation/CBB064949696/)

Article Weisser, Olivia; (2013)
Grieved and Disordered: Gender and Emotion in Early Modern Patient Narratives (/isis/citation/CBB001200321/)

Book Olivia Weisser; (2015)
Ill Composed: Sickness, Gender, and Belief in Early Modern England (/isis/citation/CBB692734827/)

Chapter Pelling, Margaret; (2005)
Politics, Medicine, and Masculinity: Physicians and Office-Bearing in Early Modern England (/isis/citation/CBB000773822/)

Article Hofer, Hans-Georg; (2007)
Medizin, Altern, Männlichkeit: Zur Kulturgeschichte des männlichen Klimakteriums (/isis/citation/CBB000831616/)

Article Harris, Bernard; Gorsky, Martin; Guntupalli, Aravinda; Hinde, Andrew; (2011)
Ageing, Sickness and Health in England and Wales during the Mortality Transition (/isis/citation/CBB001210679/)

Book Yallop, Helen; (2013)
Age and Identity in Eighteenth-Century England (/isis/citation/CBB001550913/)

Article Hilton, Claire; (2015)
Psychiatrists, Mental Health Provision and “Senile Dementia” in England, 1940s--1979 (/isis/citation/CBB001551564/)

Authors & Contributors
Houck, Judith A.
Watkins, Elizabeth Siegel
Weisser, Olivia
Brookes, Barbara L.
Coste, Joël
Evans, Jennifer
Journals
Social History of Medicine
Canadian Bulletin of Medical History/Bulletin Canadienne d'Histoire de la Medecine
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
French History
History of Psychiatry
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies
Publishers
CLUEB
Harvard University Press
Pickering & Chatto
University of Minnesota Press
Yale University Press
Concepts
Medicine and gender
Aging
Medicine
Menopause
Women and health
Masculinity
Time Periods
Early modern
20th century
17th century
18th century
19th century
16th century
Places
England
Great Britain
United States
Canada
France
Wales
Institutions
Medical Women's Federation (Great Britain)
Comments

Be the first to comment!

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

Log in or register to comment