The paper investigates the implications, for a ‘one-sex’ model of the body, of the Hippocratic case history in which a woman ceases to menstruate and then grows a beard after her husband leaves. This story challenges a model of sexual difference based solely on the gonads, drawing attention to other visible or audible markers, and to the hierarchical relationships between them. The long history of reception of this story, telling it in a variety of contexts ranging from ‘sex change’ stories to lovesickness to accounts of prolapse, and setting it beside other stories from outside the ancient medical tradition, shows both its flexibility and the importance of having a Hippocratic seal of authority. Two gendered Greek terms in the story, oikou...
By far the most influential work on the history of the body, across a wide range of academic discipl...
This chapter discusses the early history of attempts to find analogues in the male body for female g...
This thesis addresses healing opportunities beyond ‘professional’ doctors or the big Asclepius cults...
Hippocrates' Woman demonstrates the role of Hippocratic ideas about the female body in the subseque...
International audienceThe female illness of two patients, Phaethousa of Abdera and Nanno of Thasos, ...
The female illness of two patients, Phaethousa of Abdera and Nanno of Thasos, described by the physi...
The Hippocratic Corpus is a collection of approximately sixty medical treatises that were written by...
This thesis addresses what cultural influences and social circumstances shaped the works of the Hipp...
Traditionally, from antiquity to modern age, women made important contributions to practical medicin...
L’objet du travail de la thèse est l’étude de l’image du corps de la femme dans la littérature médic...
Hippocratic physicians sought to establish themselves as medical authorities in ancient Greece. An e...
This paper is devoted to the motif of a spontaneous sex change which appears several times in Phlego...
The compilers of the Hippocratic gynaecological treatises often recommend sexual intercourse as part...
Throughout Classical Greece, the superficial artistic conventions of pubic hair illustration illumin...
Current studies on the topic of sexuality in the ancient Greek world tend to favour the active/passi...
By far the most influential work on the history of the body, across a wide range of academic discipl...
This chapter discusses the early history of attempts to find analogues in the male body for female g...
This thesis addresses healing opportunities beyond ‘professional’ doctors or the big Asclepius cults...
Hippocrates' Woman demonstrates the role of Hippocratic ideas about the female body in the subseque...
International audienceThe female illness of two patients, Phaethousa of Abdera and Nanno of Thasos, ...
The female illness of two patients, Phaethousa of Abdera and Nanno of Thasos, described by the physi...
The Hippocratic Corpus is a collection of approximately sixty medical treatises that were written by...
This thesis addresses what cultural influences and social circumstances shaped the works of the Hipp...
Traditionally, from antiquity to modern age, women made important contributions to practical medicin...
L’objet du travail de la thèse est l’étude de l’image du corps de la femme dans la littérature médic...
Hippocratic physicians sought to establish themselves as medical authorities in ancient Greece. An e...
This paper is devoted to the motif of a spontaneous sex change which appears several times in Phlego...
The compilers of the Hippocratic gynaecological treatises often recommend sexual intercourse as part...
Throughout Classical Greece, the superficial artistic conventions of pubic hair illustration illumin...
Current studies on the topic of sexuality in the ancient Greek world tend to favour the active/passi...
By far the most influential work on the history of the body, across a wide range of academic discipl...
This chapter discusses the early history of attempts to find analogues in the male body for female g...
This thesis addresses healing opportunities beyond ‘professional’ doctors or the big Asclepius cults...