| Darrera modificació: 2020-04-21Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
 Rawcliffe, Carole, Leprosy in Medieval England, Woodbridge, Boydell & Brewer, 2006, 440 pp. 
ResumSet firmly in the medical, religious and cultural milieu of the European Middle Ages, this book is the first serious academic study of a disease surrounded by misconceptions and prejudices. Even specialists will be surprised to learn that most of our stereotyped ideas about the segregation of medieval lepers originated in the nineteenth century; that leprosy excited a vast range of responses, from admiration to revulsion; that in the later Middle Ages it was diagnosed readily even by laity; that a wide range of treatment was available, that medieval leper hospitals were no more austere than the monasteries on which they were modelled; that the decline of leprosy was not monocausal but implied a complex web of factors—medical, environmental, social and legal. Carole Rawcliffe writes with consummate skill, subtlety and rigour; her book will change forever the image of the medieval leper. -- Carole Rawcliffe is Professor of Medieval History at the University of East Anglia. 
 Contents:
 1. Creating the medieval leper: some myths and misunderstandings
 2. The body and the soul: ideas about causation
 3. The sick and the healthy: reactions to suffering
 4. Priests and physicians: the business of diagnosis
 5. Medicine and surgery: the battle against disease
 6. A Disease appart? The impact of segregation
 7. Life in the medieval leper house
MatèriesHistòria de la medicinaMedicina - Pesta i altres malalties
NotesInformació de l'editor  Recensions:
 * F.-O. Touati, a Medical History, 53 (2009), 150-151
  . * Tabuteau (2009), "La lèpre dans l'Angleterre ..."
URLhttp://books.google.com/books?id=M0NE9RB28esC   |