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Book Synopsis


Trade Review
"Since the Covid-19 pandemic, there might be less inclination to ridicule medieval public health measures such as mask-wearing and lockdowns. Yet pre-modern medicine is still often discredited as primitive. As Embodying the Soul, Meg Leja’s momentous study of Carolingian medicine, attests, discoveries made in the Middle Ages helped lay the foundation for medical theory and practice today...This beautifully produced book is of a kind rare in an academic landscape of fast-paced research and employment. Leja makes a polished, compelling argument on a rich basis of medical, theological and philosophical texts, which will surely set the standard for the next decade." * Times Literary Supplement *
"Meg Leja’s masterful study is less about medicine in the early decades of the ninth century per se and more about the body’s relationship to the soul and what medical attention to the body revealed about the symbiosis of body and soul...[T]he thesis of Embodying the Soul is original and substantiated by stellar research. The book is an important contribution to the history of early medieval medicine and to understanding the ninth-century theology of body and soul. No study of medieval medicine can afford to ignore this work." * Church History *
"[Leja's] knowledge of the manuscript record of Carolingian medicine is comprehensive, and she lucidly explains the sometimes bewildering “album” quality of these volumes, in which texts are set side by side without an apparent structure but with an intent that can be discerned by carefully considering their choice and disposition. The clarity with which she explains their significance as vehicles of medical knowledge is both exact and refreshing. Leja’s mastery of the secondary literature on Carolingian culture, medical history, history of the body, and Christian theology and practice is also impressive and reassuring. All this serves to undergird an argument that is original, carefully articulated, eloquently presented, and destined to shape our understanding of the worlds it described for decades to come." * Studies in Late Antiquity *
"In Embodying the Soul, Meg Leja aims to subtly reconfigure assumptions surrounding early medieval medicine...The book’s scope is impressive and adds significantly to the recent trend in scholarship towards reading medical texts for their literary value and alongside other types of literary, theological, and hagiographical traditions...It seems likely that this fascinating and learned study will be directing the study of Carolingian medicine for years to come." * The Medieval Review *
"There is a great deal of evidence about Carolingian medicine, but because it doesn’t fit many of the standard narratives about the period, few scholars have paid it much attention. Meg Leja provides an impressive and thoughtful examination of the nature of the medical evidence and of the ways that it intersected with other forms of knowledge and practice—ensuring by the end that medicine is seen not just as a niche monastic antiquarian concern but as something that was relevant to the Carolingian world more broadly." * James T. Palmer, University of St. Andrews *

Embodying the Soul

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    A Hardback by Meg Leja

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      View other formats and editions of Embodying the Soul by Meg Leja

      Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
      Publication Date: 26/04/2022
      ISBN13: 9780812253894, 978-0812253894
      ISBN10: 0812253892

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      "Since the Covid-19 pandemic, there might be less inclination to ridicule medieval public health measures such as mask-wearing and lockdowns. Yet pre-modern medicine is still often discredited as primitive. As Embodying the Soul, Meg Leja’s momentous study of Carolingian medicine, attests, discoveries made in the Middle Ages helped lay the foundation for medical theory and practice today...This beautifully produced book is of a kind rare in an academic landscape of fast-paced research and employment. Leja makes a polished, compelling argument on a rich basis of medical, theological and philosophical texts, which will surely set the standard for the next decade." * Times Literary Supplement *
      "Meg Leja’s masterful study is less about medicine in the early decades of the ninth century per se and more about the body’s relationship to the soul and what medical attention to the body revealed about the symbiosis of body and soul...[T]he thesis of Embodying the Soul is original and substantiated by stellar research. The book is an important contribution to the history of early medieval medicine and to understanding the ninth-century theology of body and soul. No study of medieval medicine can afford to ignore this work." * Church History *
      "[Leja's] knowledge of the manuscript record of Carolingian medicine is comprehensive, and she lucidly explains the sometimes bewildering “album” quality of these volumes, in which texts are set side by side without an apparent structure but with an intent that can be discerned by carefully considering their choice and disposition. The clarity with which she explains their significance as vehicles of medical knowledge is both exact and refreshing. Leja’s mastery of the secondary literature on Carolingian culture, medical history, history of the body, and Christian theology and practice is also impressive and reassuring. All this serves to undergird an argument that is original, carefully articulated, eloquently presented, and destined to shape our understanding of the worlds it described for decades to come." * Studies in Late Antiquity *
      "In Embodying the Soul, Meg Leja aims to subtly reconfigure assumptions surrounding early medieval medicine...The book’s scope is impressive and adds significantly to the recent trend in scholarship towards reading medical texts for their literary value and alongside other types of literary, theological, and hagiographical traditions...It seems likely that this fascinating and learned study will be directing the study of Carolingian medicine for years to come." * The Medieval Review *
      "There is a great deal of evidence about Carolingian medicine, but because it doesn’t fit many of the standard narratives about the period, few scholars have paid it much attention. Meg Leja provides an impressive and thoughtful examination of the nature of the medical evidence and of the ways that it intersected with other forms of knowledge and practice—ensuring by the end that medicine is seen not just as a niche monastic antiquarian concern but as something that was relevant to the Carolingian world more broadly." * James T. Palmer, University of St. Andrews *

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