This article discusses the function of tension in autobiographies written by eighteenth-century doctors George Cheyne, Francis Fuller, Claude Revillon, and the Viscount de Puysegur. It studies how their rhetorical strategies stir tensions in readers through the narration of their own periods of infirmity and search for a remedy. The descriptions of their recoveries offer resolution, legitimate their medical practices, and help diffuse their works. Through the staging of these reversals, the authors suggest a shift in the way the role of medical doctors was perceived as well as a fundamental change in their relationship to illness.Sabine Arnaud, ‘Tension and Narrative: Autobiographies of Illness and Therapeutic Legitimacy in Eighteenth-Centu...
Set in a sanatorium and narrated by patients suffering from tuberculosis, Camilo José Cela’s Pabelló...
While intensifiers are primarily associated with informal spoken registers, they serve important int...
Medical Celebrity in Eighteenth-Century Britain argues that the cultural mechanisms responsible for ...
This article discusses the function of tension in autobiographies written by eighteenth-century doct...
How did doctors argue in eighteenth-century medical pamphlet wars? How literary, or clinical, is Did...
The increasing prestige of medicine as a science, accompanied by the social rise of the doctor, in e...
Contrary Signs: Categorizing Illness in Early Modern Literature investigates the relationship betwee...
My dissertation aims to reconstruct a genealogy of medical writing in the early modern period that f...
This study investigates eighteenth-century medical writing, particularly concerning the elaboration ...
In the 18th century, novels were considered to have an impact on the readers’ mental and physical he...
This dissertation investigates issues of patient agency in early American letters, diaries, missiona...
Today the idea of reading for health is perhaps most commonly associated with the term bibliotherapy...
This study investigates eighteenth-century medical writing, particularly concerning the elaboration ...
226 pagesIn order to understand the practices of a modern medicine based on an ideology of normal th...
This article analyses how Mandeville’s Treatise of the hypochodriack and hysterick passions (1711) w...
Set in a sanatorium and narrated by patients suffering from tuberculosis, Camilo José Cela’s Pabelló...
While intensifiers are primarily associated with informal spoken registers, they serve important int...
Medical Celebrity in Eighteenth-Century Britain argues that the cultural mechanisms responsible for ...
This article discusses the function of tension in autobiographies written by eighteenth-century doct...
How did doctors argue in eighteenth-century medical pamphlet wars? How literary, or clinical, is Did...
The increasing prestige of medicine as a science, accompanied by the social rise of the doctor, in e...
Contrary Signs: Categorizing Illness in Early Modern Literature investigates the relationship betwee...
My dissertation aims to reconstruct a genealogy of medical writing in the early modern period that f...
This study investigates eighteenth-century medical writing, particularly concerning the elaboration ...
In the 18th century, novels were considered to have an impact on the readers’ mental and physical he...
This dissertation investigates issues of patient agency in early American letters, diaries, missiona...
Today the idea of reading for health is perhaps most commonly associated with the term bibliotherapy...
This study investigates eighteenth-century medical writing, particularly concerning the elaboration ...
226 pagesIn order to understand the practices of a modern medicine based on an ideology of normal th...
This article analyses how Mandeville’s Treatise of the hypochodriack and hysterick passions (1711) w...
Set in a sanatorium and narrated by patients suffering from tuberculosis, Camilo José Cela’s Pabelló...
While intensifiers are primarily associated with informal spoken registers, they serve important int...
Medical Celebrity in Eighteenth-Century Britain argues that the cultural mechanisms responsible for ...