Dear Colleagues,

 

the Centre for the Study of Medicine and the Body in the Renaissance (CSMBR) - Pisa is excited to announce a new lecture series developed in collaboration with the Centre for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists of the University of Paderborn. 


We hope it will meet with appreciation from scholars working across a variety of fields:



Women's Ideas in the History of Medicine

Food, Plants, Remedies, and Healing Practices

Online Lecture Series

8 May - 10 July 2024



Organised by

 

Jil Muller & Fabrizio Bigotti 



This series seeks to understand the role of women in the history of medicine. Women's contributions to the theoretical and practical fields of medicine will be explored in a series of lectures by a variety of scholars. Topics range from natural philosophy, such as the works of Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179), to fields often derided and overlooked by their male contemporaries, such as home remedies, plant manipulation and selection, and midwifery.

 

From Body to Soul:

Mental Disorders in Hildegard of Bingen’s "Cause et Cure"

Giulia Guidara

 

8 May 2024 – 4.30 PM (CEST)

 

The Cause et cure of Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179) is both a cosmological text and a medical handbook. This double aspect, so to speak, of the work is not surprising: in medieval Europe, human beings and nature are deeply interconnected. As the title Cause et cure suggests, most of the work focuses on the causes and natural treatment of several diseases. Hildegard’s idea of disease is very different from the present one: sickness always derives from a physiological change in the body. The reference framework is the humoral theory, according to which the four humours, or bodily fluids, (i.e. blood, phlegm, yellow bile and black bile) affect temperament, physical qualities and health. However, some diseases described in the Cause et cure mainly affect mood and behaviour and, in this regard, they can be assimilated into the modern concept of mental disorders. My lecture will analyse the passages of Cause et cure devoted to diseases that affect mood and behaviour, with a special focus on their causes and their possible treatment. This allows us to highlight both Hildegard’s ideas on the relationship between soul and body, and the medieval concept of mental illness. 



Anna Margaretha Wiedemann:

A Healing Woman and her Patients in Early Modern Frankfurt

Jana Schreiber

 

29 May 2024 – 4.30 PM (CEST) 

 

In 1670, a conflict between Frankfurt surgeons and the healer Anna Margaretha Wiedemann broke out. The surviving sources offer deep insights into the practice of women healers in the early modern period, who treated their patients, competing with male doctors and barbers. In addition to statements by Wiedemann and the surgeons, there are numerous testimonies from patients, which shed light on the coping strategies used by the community to deal with diseases. They also show the expectations and duties that were set and fulfilled by patients, their social environment and the healers. This lecture will address the following questions: 

 

How did the relationship between healers, patients and their social environment take form?

What knowledge and forms of medical treatment were used by the practitioners?

How were disease and health defined and differentiated by the protagonists?



Margaret Cavendish and the Medical Establishment

Justin Begley & Benjamin Goldberg

19 June 2024 – 4.30 PM (CEST) 

 

This talk explores how the seventeenth-century philosopher Margaret Cavendish interacted with the medical world of her time. We examine a set of historiographical issues arising from a manuscript collection of her and William’s medical recipes, MS Pw V90, preserved in the archives of the University of Nottingham. Our transcription and analysis of this manuscript (The Medical World of Margaret Cavendish, Palgrave-MacMillan: 2023) challenges the common view that Cavendish opposed traditional Galenic medicine as well as the Scholastic tradition. In grappling with her views on professional medicine, we also investigate whether Cavendish faced any discrimination or mistreatment from her doctors because of her gender, as some have suggested, focusing on her relationship to one of her physicians in particular, the prominent doctor Théodore de Mayerne. Along the way, we highlight the medical achievements (mainly in the recipe field) of other noblewomen in Cavendish’s network. 



Seasonality and Slaughter:

Sourcing Animal Ingredients in 17th-Century Household Medicine 

Madeleine Sheahan

 

26 June 2024 – 4.30 PM (CEST) 

 

Springtime was an industrious season of the 17th-century household. In a period of domestic production and proactivity, household medical practitioners worked to prevent illness and preserve health. The perceived environmental subjectivity of the body encouraged practitioners to prepare stocks of medicine for a host of ailments believed to arise from changing climatic, ecological, and astrological conditions, as well as shifts in human activity, labour, and diet. At the same time as the changing environment threatened the health of the body, springtime opened new possibilities to source natural ingredients for the making of remedies. Of note was the provisioning of pregnant and juvenile animals, made readily available by the changing season and desired for their perceived medical efficacy. Turning to these seasonal aspects of domestic medical care, this talk provides an analysis of animal sourcing and processing techniques recommended in a series of seventeenth-century English manuscript recipes authored by women. In highlighting the interconnected issues of seasonality, medical provisioning, and animal utility, it illuminates a domestic epistemology of animal use and value, as well as the environmental specificity of household medicine. 



Female Seeds, Powers, and Bodies: Albert the Great and the Vegetal Sexuality

Amalia Cerrito

 

10 July 2024 – 4.30 PM (CEST)

 

The 13th-century Dominican master Albert the Great extensively discusses vegetal sexuality. While animals reproduce through the mating of female and male individuals, plants lack a sexual distinction, reproducing through seeds that contain all necessary conditions for plant generation. Furthermore, the primary paternal and maternal functions, such as fertilization, generative material provision, and nourishment during development, do not involve individuals of the same plant species. External causal agencies perform these functions, like the Sun and the soil (traditionally regarded as the “father and mother of plants”). He is convinced that “male and female” and “motherhood and fatherhood” manifest in nature to varying degrees, ranging from the most perfect nature, i.e., human beings, to the less perfect, i.e., plants. Plants express masculinitas and femininitas proportionally to their nature. The examination of plant generation provides an opportunity to elucidate these concepts, defining the essential aspects and causal roles of male and female functions and features. In this lecture, I will focus on how Albert employs concepts such as the female “body”, “seed”, and “power”, in his investigation on vegetal sexuality.

 

To register for one or more of these events please follow the link:

https://csmbr.fondazionecomel.org/events/conferences-webinars/womens-ideas-history-of-medicine/



Kindest regards,
Andreas Hylla

Centre for the Study of Medicine and the Body in the Renaissance (CSMBR) - Assistant Coordinator

Domus Comeliana, Via Cardinale Maffi 48, 56126 Pisa, Italy

Tel.: +39.02.006.20.51 - Mobile: +39.333.13.12.203

Email: [log in to unmask] 


Instagram|Facebook|Twitter 
YouTube | Wikipedia | Pinterest
********************************************************************** psci-com how-to: Once subscribed, send emails for the list to [log in to unmask] If not subscribed, either subscribe here https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?A0=psci-com or send requests for items to be posted on your behalf to [log in to unmask] To unsubscribe (or silence messages while away) send an email (any subject) to [log in to unmask] with one of the following messages (ignoring text in brackets) • signoff psci-com (to leave the list) • set psci-com nomail (to stop receiving messages while on holiday) • set psci-com mail (to resume getting messages) Contact list owner at [log in to unmask] Small print and JISCMail acceptable use policy https://sites.google.com/site/pscicomjiscmail/the-small-print Contact Jisc Helpline: Email: [log in to unmask], Telephone: 0300 300 2212 **********************************************************************