| Darrera modificació: 2017-02-13Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
 Bertoloni Meli, Domenico - Klestinec, Cynthia, "Renaissance Surgery Between Learning and Craft", Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 72/1 (2017), 1-5. 
ResumIn Spring 2015, the present authors met at a conference and bemoaned the relative paucity of scholarship on Renaissance surgery, a time that saw the rise of fire weapons and corresponding wounds, the emergence of a seemingly unknown disease from the New World, and the publication of major ancient treatises.1 We were struck, in contrast, by the richness of scholarship on the history of anatomy and the variety of methodological approaches it displays—intellectual history and the history of philosophy, history of the book, social history, and visual and literary studies. Our exchange led to a workshop held at Indiana University, Bloomington, in October of that year; the present collection stems from papers delivered on that occasion.
MatèriesHistòria de la medicinaMedicina - Cirurgia i anatomia
 Història de la ciència
URLhttps://academic.oup.com/jhmas/article-abstract/72/ ...   |