Darrera modificació: 2017-07-02 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
Green, Monica H., Women's Healthcare in the Medieval West, Aldershot, Ashgate Variorum (Variorum Collected Studies Series, CS680), 2000, 412 pp.
- Resum
- In this collection of seven major essays (one of them published here for the first time), Monica Green argues that a history of women's healthcare in medieval western Europe has not yet been written because it cannot yet be written - the vast majority of texts relating to women's healthcare have never been edited or studied. Using the insights of women's history and gender studies, Green shows how historians need to peel off the layers of unfounded assumption and stereotype that have characterized the little work that has been done on medieval women's healthcare. Seen in their original contexts, medieval gynecological texts raise questions of women's activity as healthcare providers and recipients, as well as questions of how the sexual division of labor, literacy, and professionalization functioned in the production and use of medical knowledge on the female body. An appendix lists all known medieval gynecological texts in Latin and the western European vernacular languages.
Contents:
* I. Women's medical practice and health care in medieval Europe
* II. Green (1994), "Documenting medieval women's ..."
* III. Green (1987), "The De genecia attributed to ..."
* IV. Obstetrical and gynecological texts in Middle English
* V. Green (1996), "The development of the Trotula"
* VI. Green (1998), "Traittié tout de mençonges ..."
* VII. Green (2000), "The possibilities of literacy and ..." (inèdit)
* VIII. Medieval gynecological literature: a handlist (inèdit)
- Matèries
- Història de la medicina
Dones Medicina - Ginecologia, obstetrícia i cosmètica Sexualitat
- Notes
- Informació de l'editor
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