Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review

Acts of Care forces historians to reconsider what is understood as premodern medicine, to unthink in biomedical terms, and to avoid projecting our understanding of medical science onto the premodern past. Instead of looking at authoritative discourses, Ritchey explores other narratives recounting acts and practices.

* Comitatus *

Her fresh and nuanced reading of sources like hagiographies and psalters is a tremendous methodological contribution that will be influential for scholars working on topics beyond the scope of Ritchey's subject matter. For all these reasons, Ritchey's book deserves a wide readership among those interested in the history of medicine, religious women and gender.

* Social History of Medicine *

I hope to have suggested how resourceful and persuasive [Acts of Care is] in joining fragments to make a whole, in recovering lost worlds of women's caregiving. [This book demonstrates] once again that in medieval Europe, women's agency was much more considerable than has long been assumed or asserted.

* Journal of the American Academy of Religion *

By examining sources more often viewed spiritually as part of—and, indeed, central to—the medical archive, Ritchey offers a nuanced and innovative study of women's caregiving work in the Middle Ages. A necessary intervention into the premodern medical humanities, the history of religion, and gender studies, this book provides a clearly written, skillfully researched, and captivating study of medieval women's health care practices.

* Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies *

Table of Contents

Introduction: To Heed the Trace
Part I: Therapeutic Narratives
1. Translating Care: The Circulation of Healing Stories
2. Bedside Comforts: The Social Organization of Care
Part II: Therapeutic Knowledge
3. Empirical Bodies: Competing Theories of Therapeutic Authority
Part III: Therapeutic Practice
4. Rhythmic Medicine: The Psalter as a Therapeutic Technology in Beguine Communities
5. Salutary Words: Saints' Lives as Efficacious Texts in Cistercian Women's Abbeys
Afterword

Acts of Care

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    A Hardback by Sara Ritchey

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      View other formats and editions of Acts of Care by Sara Ritchey

      Publisher: Cornell University Press
      Publication Date: 15/03/2021
      ISBN13: 9781501753534, 978-1501753534
      ISBN10: 1501753533

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review

      Acts of Care forces historians to reconsider what is understood as premodern medicine, to unthink in biomedical terms, and to avoid projecting our understanding of medical science onto the premodern past. Instead of looking at authoritative discourses, Ritchey explores other narratives recounting acts and practices.

      * Comitatus *

      Her fresh and nuanced reading of sources like hagiographies and psalters is a tremendous methodological contribution that will be influential for scholars working on topics beyond the scope of Ritchey's subject matter. For all these reasons, Ritchey's book deserves a wide readership among those interested in the history of medicine, religious women and gender.

      * Social History of Medicine *

      I hope to have suggested how resourceful and persuasive [Acts of Care is] in joining fragments to make a whole, in recovering lost worlds of women's caregiving. [This book demonstrates] once again that in medieval Europe, women's agency was much more considerable than has long been assumed or asserted.

      * Journal of the American Academy of Religion *

      By examining sources more often viewed spiritually as part of—and, indeed, central to—the medical archive, Ritchey offers a nuanced and innovative study of women's caregiving work in the Middle Ages. A necessary intervention into the premodern medical humanities, the history of religion, and gender studies, this book provides a clearly written, skillfully researched, and captivating study of medieval women's health care practices.

      * Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies *

      Table of Contents

      Introduction: To Heed the Trace
      Part I: Therapeutic Narratives
      1. Translating Care: The Circulation of Healing Stories
      2. Bedside Comforts: The Social Organization of Care
      Part II: Therapeutic Knowledge
      3. Empirical Bodies: Competing Theories of Therapeutic Authority
      Part III: Therapeutic Practice
      4. Rhythmic Medicine: The Psalter as a Therapeutic Technology in Beguine Communities
      5. Salutary Words: Saints' Lives as Efficacious Texts in Cistercian Women's Abbeys
      Afterword

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