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Vernacular Bodies
Mary Elizabeth Fissell
其他書名
The Politics of Reproduction in Early Modern England
出版
Oxford University Press
, 2004
主題
Health & Fitness / Pregnancy & Childbirth
History / Europe / Great Britain / General
History / Europe / Renaissance
History / Social History
Medical / History
Medical / Reproductive Medicine & Technology
Political Science / World / European
Science / Life Sciences / Human Anatomy & Physiology
Social Science / Customs & Traditions
ISBN
0199269882
9780199269884
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=euwTDAAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Making babies was a mysterious process in early modern England. Mary Fissell employs a wealth of popular sources - ballads, jokes, witchcraft pamphlets, prayerbooks, popular medical manuals - to produce the first account of women's reproductive bodies in early-modern cheap print. Since little was certain about the mysteries of reproduction, the topic lent itself to a rich array of theories. The insides of women's reproductive bodies provided a kind of open interpretive space, a place where many different models of reproductive processes might be plausible. These models were profoundly shaped by cultural concerns; they afforded many ways to discuss and make sense of social, political, and economic changes such as the Protestant Reformation and the Civil War. They gave ordinary people ways of thinking about the changing relations between men and women that characterized these larger social shifts. Fissell offers a new way to think about the history of the body by focusing on women's bodies, showing how ideas about conception, pregnancy, and childbirth were also ways of talking about gender relations and thus all relations of power. Where other histories of the body have focused on learned texts and male bodies, Vernacular Bodies looks at the small books and pamphlets that ordinary people read and listened to - and provides new ways to understand how such people experienced political conflicts and social change.