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Medicine and the Making of Roman Women: Gender, Nature, and Authority from Celsus to Galen
 
 
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Medicine and the Making of Roman Women: Gender, Nature, and Authority from Celsus to Galen [Hardcover]

Rebecca Flemming (Author)

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Book Description

0199240027 978-0199240029 March 22, 2001
In this book Dr Flemming includes new translations of some of the works of medical practitioners from Celsus, writing during the reign of Tiberius, to Galen, whose career ended under the Severans, and puts their ideas about women's bodies in their social and philosophical contexts.

Relations between women and medicine are now a major area of historical enquiry, but the Roman imperial era, despite the plentiful material it offers and the critical role it plays in the formation of the Western medical tradition, has received less than its fair share of the attention. This book seeks to redress the balance as it investigates female involvement in the manifold medical activities of the Roman world: how women fared as practitioners and patients, how they were understood and described in the copious medical writings of the period, and what effects those understandings and descriptions had in wider society. Dr. Flemming examines both the contribution of medicine to gender in the Roman Empire, and the contribution of gender to medicine, and argues that the particularities of the Roman relationship between the two has much to reveal about how systems of sexual difference work in general.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

The book delivers more than it promises ... important book. Journal of Roman Studies Flemming's translations are accurate and some of these texts have not been translated into a modern language before. The book is therefore very useful because it makes all these materials accessible to the non-classicist and offers an overview to those more familiar with classical texts. Medical History In spite of the increased interest in both ancient medical science and the history of women, Rebecca Flemming's book covers a still quite neglected field by combining both of them. Medical History

About the Author

Rebecca Flemming is at King's College London.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
MEDICINE has now become an accepted, even favoured, area of enquiry for those interested in the history of women, and in past interpretations and organizations of sexual difference more broadly. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
diseased disposition, foetal formation, female flux, monthly purges, somatic economy, uterine suffocation, menstrual retention, medical woman, sectarian structure, ist cent, seminal vessels, generative parts, provident nature, innate heat, classical medicine, medical art
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Marcus Aurelius, Ann Ellis Hanson, Soranus of Ephesus, Vivian Nutton, Aelius Aristides, Alexander Philalethes, Anonvmus Parisinus, Antoninus Pius, John Riddle, Natural History, Pliny the Elder, Rufus of Ephesus, Second Sophistic, Anonymus Parisinus
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