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Londinopolis
  • Language: en

Londinopolis

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2000
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  • Publisher: Unknown

The essays in this volume range widely, covering the themes of polis and the police, gender and sexuality, space and place, and material culture and consumption.

A Tale of Three Thirsty Cities
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 411

A Tale of Three Thirsty Cities

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2017-11-01
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  • Publisher: BRILL

In A Tale of Three Thirsty Cities, Jaime-Chaim Shulman offers an analysis of three engineering projects of urban water supply systems carried out between 1560s – 1610s. Mainly external conditions, and not technology, affected the improvement achieved in the inhabitants’ wellbeing.

Medicine and the Market in England and its Colonies, c.1450- c.1850
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 269

Medicine and the Market in England and its Colonies, c.1450- c.1850

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2007-09-12
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  • Publisher: Springer

What was the medical marketplace? This book provides the first critical examination of medicine and the market in pre-modern England, colonial North America and British India. Chapters explore the most important themes in the social history of medicine and offer a fresh understanding of healthcare in this time of social and economic transformation.

Medicine and the Market in England and Its Colonies, C.1450- C.1850
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 298

Medicine and the Market in England and Its Colonies, C.1450- C.1850

An age of quackery and medical diversity, premodern medicine has often been described as a 'medical marketplace'. But what is a 'medical marketplace'? And what does it tell us about medical practice and knowledge? This volume provides the first systematic examination of medicine and the market in England, North America and India between the fifteenth and nineteenth centuries. Covering key themes, including magic, midwifery, and professionalization, it offers a new understanding of how healthcare operated and changed over this period.

Smell in Eighteenth-century England
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 261

Smell in Eighteenth-century England

In England from the 1670s to the 1820s a transformation took place in how smell and the senses were viewed. The role of smell in developing medical and scientific knowledge came under intense scrutiny, and the equation of smell with disease was actively questioned. Yet a new interest in smell's emotive and idiosyncratic dimensions offered odour a new power in the sociable spaces of eighteenth-century England. Using a wide range of sources from diaries, letters, and sanitary records to satirical prints, consumer objects, and magazines, William Tullett traces how individuals and communities perceived the smells around them, from paint and perfume to onions and farts. In doing so, the study challenges a popular, influential, and often cited narrative. Smell in Eighteenth-Century England is not a tale of the medicalization and deodorization of English olfactory culture. Instead, Tullett demonstrates that it was a new recognition of smell's asocial-sociability, and its capacity to create atmospheres of uncomfortable intimacy, that transformed the relationship between the senses and society.

Taming Capitalism Before Its Triumph
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 355

Taming Capitalism Before Its Triumph

This study examines the darker side of England's culture of economic improvement between 1640 and 1720. It is often suggested that England in this period grew strikingly confident of its prospect for unlimited growth. Indeed, merchants, inventors, and others promised to achieve immense profit and abundance. Such flowery promises were then, as now, prone to perversion, however. This volume is concerned with the taming of incipient capitalism - how a society in the past responded when promises of wealth creation went badly wrong. The notion of 'projecting' played a key role in this process. Thriving theatre, literature, and popular culture in the age of Ben Jonson began elaborating on predomin...

Cultural Capitals
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 214

Cultural Capitals

Social theories of modernity focus on the nineteenth century as the period when Western Europe was transformed by urbanization. Cities became thriving metropolitan centers as a result of economic, political, and social changes wrought by the industrial revolution. In Cultural Capitals, Karen Newman demonstrates that speculation and capital, the commodity, the crowd, traffic, and the street, often thought to be historically specific to nineteenth-century urban culture, were in fact already at work in early modern London and Paris. Newman challenges the notion of a rupture between premodern and modern societies and shows how London and Paris became cultural capitals. Drawing upon poetry, plays...

Bodies, Speech, and Reproductive Knowledge in Early Modern England
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 232

Bodies, Speech, and Reproductive Knowledge in Early Modern England

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2015-07-16
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  • Publisher: Routledge

This volume examines early modern representations of women’s reproductive knowledge through new readings of plays, monstrous birth pamphlets, medical treatises, court records, histories, and more, which are often interpreted as depicting female reproductive bodies as passive, silenced objects of male control and critique. Luttfring argues instead that these texts represent women exercising epistemological control over reproduction through the stories they tell about their bodies and the ways they act these stories out, combining speech and physical performance into what Luttfring calls 'bodily narratives.' The power of these bodily narratives extends beyond knowledge of individual bodies t...

The Places of Wit in Early Modern English Comedy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 271

The Places of Wit in Early Modern English Comedy

An exploration of wit, witlessness and social and comic conventions in the plays of Shakespeare, Jonson and their contemporaries.

Medical Paratexts from Medieval to Modern
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 187

Medical Paratexts from Medieval to Modern

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2018-05-15
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  • Publisher: Springer

This collection establishes the term ‘medical paratexts’ as a useful addition to medical humanities, book history, and literary studies research. As a relatively new field of study, little critical attention has been paid to medical paratexts. We understand paratext as the apparatus of graphic communication: title pages, prefaces, illustrations, marginalia, and publishing details which act as mediators between text and reader. Discussing the development of medical paratexts across scribal, print and digital media, the collection spans the medieval period to the twenty-first century. Dissecting the Page is structured in two thematic sections, underpinned by a shared examination of ideas of medical and lay readership and a history of reader response. The first section focuses on the production, reception, and use of medical texts. The second section analyses the role and significance of authority, access, and dissemination in discussions of health, medicine, and illness, for both lay and medical readerships.