In the beginning of the Paedagogus, Clement of Alexandria (c. 200 CE) marshals a lengthy, medically-inflected allegory of God the Father breastfeeding new Christians on the milk that is Christ. In so doing, Clement enters into a medical debate about the precise substance and mechanism of lactation. Siding with the dominant view, found in Aristotle and Galen, Clement thinks that breast milk is formed from menstrual blood that has been rerouted to the breasts and transformed into milk. But Clement differs from this line of thought in claiming that the transformation from blood to milk occurs not through heating, but rather through the transformational power in pneuma. In this paper, I suggest that Clement is relying on an otherwise unattested...
Prompted by Michel Foucault’s observation that “salvation is first of all essentially subsistence,” ...
Pedanius Dioscurides of Anazarbos, a physician working for the Roman army living in the first centur...
Focusing on 1 Corinthians, I argue for a literal reading of Paul’s understanding of life and death i...
In the early Roman Empire, food (and especially breast milk) was invested with the power to transfer...
Prompted by Michel Foucault\u27s observation that salvation is first of all essentially subsistence...
Most people are familiar with the phrase “you are what you eat.” But most have never encountered its...
This research examines the aspects of Jesus’ life related to food in the writings of Clement of Alex...
Nutrition meant many things to late antique and medieval Christians. It is important to remember tha...
This dissertation aims to investigate the ideology and mechanics of the ancient soul’s materiality a...
Breast milk commonly represents the early and intimate mother-infant relationship. Yet the practice ...
International audienceFor the physicians of the Hippocratic collection as well as for Aristotle, mil...
Breast milk commonly represents the early and intimate mother-infant relationship. Yet the practice ...
In this account of the pan that heat plays in the conception and development of living substances ac...
International audienceMany works has been done in recent years to study ancient Greek medical discou...
Advances in medicine and the evolution of health-related behaviors through time and across cultures ...
Prompted by Michel Foucault’s observation that “salvation is first of all essentially subsistence,” ...
Pedanius Dioscurides of Anazarbos, a physician working for the Roman army living in the first centur...
Focusing on 1 Corinthians, I argue for a literal reading of Paul’s understanding of life and death i...
In the early Roman Empire, food (and especially breast milk) was invested with the power to transfer...
Prompted by Michel Foucault\u27s observation that salvation is first of all essentially subsistence...
Most people are familiar with the phrase “you are what you eat.” But most have never encountered its...
This research examines the aspects of Jesus’ life related to food in the writings of Clement of Alex...
Nutrition meant many things to late antique and medieval Christians. It is important to remember tha...
This dissertation aims to investigate the ideology and mechanics of the ancient soul’s materiality a...
Breast milk commonly represents the early and intimate mother-infant relationship. Yet the practice ...
International audienceFor the physicians of the Hippocratic collection as well as for Aristotle, mil...
Breast milk commonly represents the early and intimate mother-infant relationship. Yet the practice ...
In this account of the pan that heat plays in the conception and development of living substances ac...
International audienceMany works has been done in recent years to study ancient Greek medical discou...
Advances in medicine and the evolution of health-related behaviors through time and across cultures ...
Prompted by Michel Foucault’s observation that “salvation is first of all essentially subsistence,” ...
Pedanius Dioscurides of Anazarbos, a physician working for the Roman army living in the first centur...
Focusing on 1 Corinthians, I argue for a literal reading of Paul’s understanding of life and death i...