Panacea's daughters: gentlewomen healers and experiential knowledge in early modern Germany
- đ¤ Speaker: Alisha Rankin (Trinity College, Cambridge)
- đ Date & Time: Thursday 01 November 2007, 16:30 - 18:00
- đ Venue: Seminar Room 2, History and Philosophy of Science, Department of
Abstract
A number of learned physicians in sixteenth-century Germany sang the praises of a particular type of healer: a gentlewoman who made medicinal remedies and handed them out to the sick poor (also helping ill aristocrats and patricians in the bargain). This paper examines the topos of the gentlewoman-healer, arguing that aristocratic women gained respect as medical practitioners not in spite of their gender, but because of it. Particularly, it focuses on gentlewomen’s reliance on experience and empirical observation to confirm the success of their medical remedies, categories that overlapped with a new interest in observation in learned medical spheres.
Series This talk is part of the Departmental Seminars in History and Philosophy of Science series.
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Thursday 01 November 2007, 16:30-18:00