Fr. 168.00

Medicine and the Body in Early Modern Europe

English · Hardback

Will be released 13.06.2025

Description

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This volume brings together essays on a wide range of topics, from the popular notion of climacterical years, believed to recur every seventh year, and the origins and development of the concept of palliative care in premodern medicine to the early modern understanding of melancholia as a disease rather than just a temperament and its visual representation in the famous Melancholia -paintings of Lukas Cranach the Elder. It examines the casuistic training, empirical observations, and public self-fashioning of learned physicians and it explores major concepts of early modern medical theory, such as the "innate heat" and diseases of the total substance as presented and elaborated in Avicenna's Canon medicinae and in Daniel Sennert's atomistic interpretation of body and soul. Published for the first time in an English translation, these essays offer readers many illuminating insights into the fascinating world of early modern medicine.

List of contents

From Step Years to Menopause The Changing Notion of the Climacteric.- Wrath, Women and Wine, Throw Our Bodies to the Swine Affects and Illness in the Early Modern Period.- Lukas Cranach's Representations of Melancholia, and the Medicine of His Time.- My Aesculapian Oracle Patient Letters as a Source of a Cultural History of Illness Experience in the Eighteenth Century.- Cura Palliativa The Idea and Practice of Palliative Treatment in Pre-Modern Medicine ca 1500-1850.- Forms and Strategies of Authorization in Early Modern Medicine.- Between Identity-Formation and Self-Staging: Medical Self-Fashioning in the Early Modern Period.- Forms and Functions of Medical Case Reports in the Early Modern Period (1500-1800).- Casuistic Medical Training in the Sixteenth Century: The Paduan Collegia.- The Concept of Innate Heat in Avicenna's Canon Medicinae.- In Awe of Creation Daniel Sennert's Conception of Total Substance, Innate Heat, and Spontaneous Generation, and His Atomistic Theory of Form.

About the author

Michael Stolberg is Senior Professor at the University of Würzburg, in Germany. Originally trained as a physician, he began working as an Assistant Professor at the Institute for the History of Medicine and Medical Sociology in Munich in 1989 and, in 1994, received a PhD in history and philosophy at the University of Munich. Over the following years, he worked as a Research Fellow in Venice, Cambridge (UK), and Munich and in 2004 he was awarded the chair of History of Medicine in Würzburg He has published widely on learned medical theory and practice, the patient experience and body history in early modern Europe. Among his books are Experiencing Illness and the Sick Body in Early Modern Europe (Palgrave, 2011), A History of Palliative Care, 1500-1970 (Springer, 2017), and Early Modern Physicians and Everyday Medical Practice in the Renaissance (De Gruyter, 2021).
 

Summary

This volume brings together essays on a wide range of topics, from the popular notion of “climacterical” years, believed to recur every seventh year, and the origins and development of the concept of “palliative” care in premodern medicine to the early modern understanding of “melancholia” as a disease rather than just a temperament and its visual representation in the famous “Melancholia”-paintings of Lukas Cranach the Elder. It examines the casuistic training, empirical observations, and public self-fashioning of learned physicians and it explores major concepts of early modern medical theory, such as the "innate heat" and diseases of the “total substance” as presented and elaborated in Avicenna's “Canon medicinae” and in Daniel Sennert's atomistic interpretation of body and soul. Published for the first time in an English translation, these essays offer readers many illuminating insights into the fascinating world of early modern medicine.

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