Throughout the early modern period, medical writers described a plethora of remedies designed to provoke menstruation. This article will address the close relationship these substances had with provokers of lust. Historians have often viewed emmenagogues as covert expressions of abortive drugs. While they acknowledge that some women utilised these treatments for their intended purpose, to restore a regular menstrual cycle, they have more frequently asserted that they were more likely to be employed to remove an unwanted pregnancy. This article asserts that this understanding is in need of reappraisal and argues that these substances can be viewed as a key component of early modern fertility and sexual health care. This article demonstrates ...
This article examines representations of female fertility and marital sexuality at a time of reprodu...
John Cleland’s 1740s pornographic novel, Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure repeatedly depicts and eroti...
This article presents a preliminary study of women’s masturbation in seventeenth-century England, wi...
Summary. Throughout the early modern period, medical writers described a plethora of remedies design...
Thy righteousness is but a menstrual clout: sanitary practices and prejudice in early modern Englan
This thesis builds upon the existing scholarship such as that by Patricia Crawford, Helen King, Alex...
Philip Barrough wrote in 1590 that barrenness ‘is caused of the womans part or of the mans part’. By...
Early-modern medicine can often be seen to be looking back and deferring to the ancient authorities ...
An absentee from the Western culture, the phenomenon of menstruation is an unlikely theme to be foun...
This thesis explores early modem perceptions of menstrual bleeding, demonstrating that attempts to u...
The purpose of this article is to examine the positive and negative properties of menstrual blood in...
Because menstruation is a normal process in women of the child-bearing years, historians long tended...
The research for this work was funded by the Royal Society of Edinburgh’s Arts and Humanities Resear...
Leah Astbury Domestic recipe books in early modern England abound with remedies to promote conceptio...
Socio-medical tools for making sense of gender and sex in Early Modern Europe were grounded in humor...
This article examines representations of female fertility and marital sexuality at a time of reprodu...
John Cleland’s 1740s pornographic novel, Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure repeatedly depicts and eroti...
This article presents a preliminary study of women’s masturbation in seventeenth-century England, wi...
Summary. Throughout the early modern period, medical writers described a plethora of remedies design...
Thy righteousness is but a menstrual clout: sanitary practices and prejudice in early modern Englan
This thesis builds upon the existing scholarship such as that by Patricia Crawford, Helen King, Alex...
Philip Barrough wrote in 1590 that barrenness ‘is caused of the womans part or of the mans part’. By...
Early-modern medicine can often be seen to be looking back and deferring to the ancient authorities ...
An absentee from the Western culture, the phenomenon of menstruation is an unlikely theme to be foun...
This thesis explores early modem perceptions of menstrual bleeding, demonstrating that attempts to u...
The purpose of this article is to examine the positive and negative properties of menstrual blood in...
Because menstruation is a normal process in women of the child-bearing years, historians long tended...
The research for this work was funded by the Royal Society of Edinburgh’s Arts and Humanities Resear...
Leah Astbury Domestic recipe books in early modern England abound with remedies to promote conceptio...
Socio-medical tools for making sense of gender and sex in Early Modern Europe were grounded in humor...
This article examines representations of female fertility and marital sexuality at a time of reprodu...
John Cleland’s 1740s pornographic novel, Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure repeatedly depicts and eroti...
This article presents a preliminary study of women’s masturbation in seventeenth-century England, wi...