UNiversity of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. April 2013. Major: English. Advisor: David Haley. 1 computer file (PDF); iv, 253 pages.English authors near the beginning of the seventeenth century explore and exploit tensions between traditional Galenic and newer Paracelsian models of contagion and cure. Medicine is both a subject and a metaphor. Shakespeare and Donne are skeptical about medicine's ability to cure. They treat new ideas cautiously yet allow room for the potential utility of chemical medicines and modern anatomies. Shakespeare engages the Galen-Paracelsus debate in All's Well That Ends Well, ultimately presenting an alchemical female healer superior to both schools. Comparison with King John and The Merry Wives of Windsor reveals...
For Galen, the best physician was the one who was able to treat his patients by means other than the...
The Temporary Nature of Health: The Humoral Body in Early Modern Drama explores the ways in which dr...
Langley This article considers Shakespeare’s metaphors of transmission, contagion and infection in t...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study explores the interrelations of rhetoric, medicine...
In the political turmoil of mid seventeenth-century England, both socio-political utopias and dystop...
The article aims at showing how Shakespeare relied on the medical vocabulary shared by his coeval so...
The article aims at showing how Shakespeare relied on the medical vocabulary shared by his coeval so...
According to traditional histories of European medicine, ideas of how blood circulates around the bo...
During the past two decades intellectual historians and cultural scholars studying the history of Re...
Beginning with an historical account of the practice of healing in early modern England, as it unfol...
Poison and Disease in Anglo-Saxon Medicine and Metaphor bridges a gap between scholarship on medieva...
This dissertation examines how early modern British writers use practical texts of spiritual and phy...
This dissertation, “The Wound that Makes Whole: Bleeding and Intersubjectivity in Middle English Rom...
In this dissertation, I argue that the humors are a productive way to read early modern drama and th...
RECOVERING THE IRRECOVERABLE: FEMALE FIGURATIVE DISTILLERS IN THREE SHAKESPEAREAN PLAYSAshley Herum...
For Galen, the best physician was the one who was able to treat his patients by means other than the...
The Temporary Nature of Health: The Humoral Body in Early Modern Drama explores the ways in which dr...
Langley This article considers Shakespeare’s metaphors of transmission, contagion and infection in t...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study explores the interrelations of rhetoric, medicine...
In the political turmoil of mid seventeenth-century England, both socio-political utopias and dystop...
The article aims at showing how Shakespeare relied on the medical vocabulary shared by his coeval so...
The article aims at showing how Shakespeare relied on the medical vocabulary shared by his coeval so...
According to traditional histories of European medicine, ideas of how blood circulates around the bo...
During the past two decades intellectual historians and cultural scholars studying the history of Re...
Beginning with an historical account of the practice of healing in early modern England, as it unfol...
Poison and Disease in Anglo-Saxon Medicine and Metaphor bridges a gap between scholarship on medieva...
This dissertation examines how early modern British writers use practical texts of spiritual and phy...
This dissertation, “The Wound that Makes Whole: Bleeding and Intersubjectivity in Middle English Rom...
In this dissertation, I argue that the humors are a productive way to read early modern drama and th...
RECOVERING THE IRRECOVERABLE: FEMALE FIGURATIVE DISTILLERS IN THREE SHAKESPEAREAN PLAYSAshley Herum...
For Galen, the best physician was the one who was able to treat his patients by means other than the...
The Temporary Nature of Health: The Humoral Body in Early Modern Drama explores the ways in which dr...
Langley This article considers Shakespeare’s metaphors of transmission, contagion and infection in t...