Representations of the body, health, and healthcare practices found in Aphra Behn’s oeuvre would need no glossing for her contemporary readers, but can appear both strange and illogical to modern eyes. As Roy Porter has argued, “[t]o a large degree our sense of our bodies, and what happens in and to them, is not first-hand but mediated through maps and expectations derived from the culture at large”, and this is two way process, whereby cultural norms inform understandings of the ways a person assumes their body to function, and understandings are reflected back into cultural literary outputs. This article, then, demonstrates that by analysing this body of work in its seventeenth-century medical context, a modern reader can be brought a ste...
This book chapter is not available through ChesterRepSusan Sontag in "Illness as Metaphor and AIDS a...
Book II of The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser can be interpreted as a self-help manual\ud within th...
This is the final published version. It first appeared at http://shm.oxfordjournals.org/content/earl...
UnrestrictedSince the rise of the novel, readers have been trained to expect conflict and resolution...
This dissertation examines how early modern British writers use practical texts of spiritual and phy...
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...
UNiversity of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. April 2013. Major: English. Advisor: David Haley. 1 comp...
Representations of disease and illness pervade the seven novels written by Anne, Emily, and Charlott...
Late eighteenth-century medical science during the rise of the Gothic tradition stood on the brink o...
This thesis explores the socio-cultural construction of disease between approximately 1510 and 1620...
My dissertation explores the presence of physiognomy, which is the reading of faces and bodily affec...
How did doctors argue in eighteenth-century medical pamphlet wars? How literary, or clinical, is Did...
This thesis addresses the relationship between colonial literature and disease. Focusing on literar...
This dissertation explores the intersection of medical care and authorial self-representation in Mid...
This book chapter is not available through ChesterRepSusan Sontag in "Illness as Metaphor and AIDS a...
Book II of The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser can be interpreted as a self-help manual\ud within th...
This is the final published version. It first appeared at http://shm.oxfordjournals.org/content/earl...
UnrestrictedSince the rise of the novel, readers have been trained to expect conflict and resolution...
This dissertation examines how early modern British writers use practical texts of spiritual and phy...
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...
UNiversity of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. April 2013. Major: English. Advisor: David Haley. 1 comp...
Representations of disease and illness pervade the seven novels written by Anne, Emily, and Charlott...
Late eighteenth-century medical science during the rise of the Gothic tradition stood on the brink o...
This thesis explores the socio-cultural construction of disease between approximately 1510 and 1620...
My dissertation explores the presence of physiognomy, which is the reading of faces and bodily affec...
How did doctors argue in eighteenth-century medical pamphlet wars? How literary, or clinical, is Did...
This thesis addresses the relationship between colonial literature and disease. Focusing on literar...
This dissertation explores the intersection of medical care and authorial self-representation in Mid...
This book chapter is not available through ChesterRepSusan Sontag in "Illness as Metaphor and AIDS a...
Book II of The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser can be interpreted as a self-help manual\ud within th...
This is the final published version. It first appeared at http://shm.oxfordjournals.org/content/earl...