In Renaissance and early modern Italy, surgery was not just a medical specialty but part of a wider culture of suffering. This included visualizations of martyrdom and a celebration of Christianity, as well as discourses on bravery and the moral strength of patients. The history of two illustrations from Giovanni Andrea Dalla Croce's surgical encyclopedia indicates how popular images travel, and about how their meaning changes over time, depending on different scientific and cultural communities. Finally, this case also shows the multiple relationships between the construction of the orientalist political and religious image of the ‘Turk’, on the one hand, and the moral contract between patients and surgeons regarding the painfulness of sur...
Jacopo Berengario da Carpi is among the most famous anatomists of the so-called “Pre-Vesalian” era. ...
International audienceThis article deals with early modern surgical case literature, more specifical...
This thesis examines how cutting altered and reshaped the relation between image and body in early m...
In Renaissance and early modern Italy, surgery was not just a medical specialty but part of a wider ...
This book uses the work of Bolognese physician and anatomist Gaspare Tagliacozzi to explore the soci...
Anatomy was crucial for the formation of modern cultural concepts of the body during the early moder...
Medicine in England came into its own in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, melding the rich tr...
Anatomy was crucial for the formation of modern cultural concepts of the body during the early moder...
Despite its relevance to modern discussions, the scholarly treatment of torture in art is relatively...
The experiences of patients who suffered from the Great Pox in early modern Europe have become the f...
The aim of this paper is to examine the part played by the sense of touch in anatomical practices an...
Rather than present a conventional medical history, the book focuses on the medical pluralism presen...
I will argue that the leprous body was an intermediary to the body of Christ in the minds of late me...
In the Renaissance era, curiosity about anatomy promoted a new visiblity of the body whose insides w...
The research compiled within this thesis examines the resurgence in awareness surrounding the compos...
Jacopo Berengario da Carpi is among the most famous anatomists of the so-called “Pre-Vesalian” era. ...
International audienceThis article deals with early modern surgical case literature, more specifical...
This thesis examines how cutting altered and reshaped the relation between image and body in early m...
In Renaissance and early modern Italy, surgery was not just a medical specialty but part of a wider ...
This book uses the work of Bolognese physician and anatomist Gaspare Tagliacozzi to explore the soci...
Anatomy was crucial for the formation of modern cultural concepts of the body during the early moder...
Medicine in England came into its own in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, melding the rich tr...
Anatomy was crucial for the formation of modern cultural concepts of the body during the early moder...
Despite its relevance to modern discussions, the scholarly treatment of torture in art is relatively...
The experiences of patients who suffered from the Great Pox in early modern Europe have become the f...
The aim of this paper is to examine the part played by the sense of touch in anatomical practices an...
Rather than present a conventional medical history, the book focuses on the medical pluralism presen...
I will argue that the leprous body was an intermediary to the body of Christ in the minds of late me...
In the Renaissance era, curiosity about anatomy promoted a new visiblity of the body whose insides w...
The research compiled within this thesis examines the resurgence in awareness surrounding the compos...
Jacopo Berengario da Carpi is among the most famous anatomists of the so-called “Pre-Vesalian” era. ...
International audienceThis article deals with early modern surgical case literature, more specifical...
This thesis examines how cutting altered and reshaped the relation between image and body in early m...