Article ID: CBB564371549

‘One Stroak of His Razour’: Tales of Self-Gelding in Early Modern England (2020)

unapi

This article examines stories of men who gelded themselves in early modern England. These events, it argues, were shaped and partly motivated by a culture in which castration was seen as both degrading and potentially empowering. Religious precedents such as that of Origen of Alexandria framed self-gelding as a foolhardy activity, but one which nevertheless indicated an impressive degree of mastery over the body and its urges. Meanwhile, judicial and popular contexts framed castration as a humiliating and emasculating ordeal. Instances of self-gelding in this period are rare but nonetheless illuminating. Relayed in medical texts and popular ballads, such actions typically occurred as a response to emotional distress. In particular, men gelded themselves as a means to express feelings of emasculation within heterosexual relationships, and to dramatically renounce their role in the libidinal economy.

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Authors & Contributors
Weisser, Olivia
Oren-Magidor, Daphna
James M. Bromley
Carlo Gelmetti
Will Stockton
Snook, Edith
Journals
Social History of Medicine
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Medical History
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
Gender and History
English Historical Review
Publishers
Yale University Press
University of Minnesota Press
University of Chicago Press
Manchester University Press
Brill
Concepts
Medicine
Sexuality
Children
Disease and diseases
Medicine and gender
Castration
People
Kelley, Edward
Zhu, Xi
Sydenham, Thomas
Ripley, George
Newton, Isaac
Mead, Richard
Time Periods
Early modern
17th century
Medieval
20th century
18th century
16th century
Places
England
Italy
Europe
Netherlands
China
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