Reading in Early Modern England: Contexts and Problems
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
‘Herbals she peruseth’: reading medicine in early modern England
In 1631, Richard Brathwaite penned a conduct manual for 'English Gentlewomen'. In Brathwaite's mind, the ideal English gentlewoman was not only chaste, modest and honourable but also an avid reader. In fact, Brathwaite specifically recommends English gentlewomen to first peruse herbals and then to deepen their medical knowledge via conference. Centred on the manuscript notebooks of two late sev...
متن کاملCasebooks in Early Modern England:
Casebooks are the richest sources that we have for encounters between early modern medical practitioners and their patients. This article compares astrological and medical records across two centuries, focused on England, and charts developments in the ways in which practitioners kept records and reflected on their practices. Astrologers had a long history of working from particular moments, st...
متن کاملThe Royal Touch in Early Modern England
With The Royal Touch in Early Modern England: Politics, Medicine and Sin, Stephen Brogan offers a new understanding of the royal touch – the ability of kings and queens to miraculously heal their subjects of particular diseases in 16th and especially 17th-century England. ‘Greater numbers of people were touched for scrofula during the Restoration by both Charles II and James II, and with greate...
متن کاملThe stillbirth rate in early modern England.
Over the last 40 years or so English parish registers have been extensively analysed to create a range of demographic measures relating to mortality, fertility and nuptiality. This process has enabled the major population changes to be revealed from 1538, the date when parish registers were first ordered to be kept, until 1837, when a national system of civil registration was introduced.1 In ad...
متن کاملBeing Mad in Early Modern England
It has become almost a rule that the birth of scientific psychiatry and what we today term clinical psychology took place in the short period between the last decade of the XVIII century and the 1820s. Everything that happened before that period-every description, diagnosis, and therapy-has been considered "pre-scientific," outdated, in a way worthless. In this paper, however, I am providing th...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Critical Survey
سال: 2000
ISSN: 0011-1570,1752-2293
DOI: 10.3167/001115700783514881