Textualizing Illness: Medicine and Culture in New England 1620-1730 Contributor(s): Priewe, Marc (Author) |
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ISBN: 3825363627 ISBN-13: 9783825363628 Publisher: Universitatsverlag Winter OUR PRICE: $61.75 Product Type: Hardcover Published: July 2014 |
Additional Information |
BISAC Categories: - History | Americas (north Central South West Indies) - Medical | History |
Series: American Studies - A Monograph |
Physical Information: 1.2" H x 5.7" W x 8.4" (1.25 lbs) 408 pages |
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc. |
Publisher Description: Textualizing Illness investigates how colonial New England writings represented and contributed to the meaning-endowment of diseases. It explores how the textual configurations of illnesses changed in the wake of the scientific revolution, growing numbers of non-Puritan settlers and African slaves, and increasing contacts with Native Americans. The representations of colonial body perceptions and illness experiences are often hidden in a broad textual archive and thus require "reading across" different texts and authors to analyze the positions and functions of the sick body in both medical and cultural discourses. In the illness narratives surveyed here, medical issues - from actual practices to intellectual responses to diseases - illustrate how early American literature and society developed a regional distinctiveness while being embedded in transnational circuits of knowledge formation and cultural practices. |