Virtuous and wise: apprehending female medical practice from Hebrew texts on women’s health care
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Caballero Navas, CarmenEditorial
Oxford University Press
Date
2019-11Referencia bibliográfica
Social History of Medicine, 32(4), 691-711, Special Cluster: Learning Practice from Texts: Jews and Medicine in the Later Middle Ages (Editado por N. Cohen-Hanegbi)
Sponsorship
Proyecto I+D "Lengua y Literatura del Judaísmo clásico y medieval [FFI2016-78171-P]", financiado por el Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad.’; Proyecto I+D "Lengua y Literatura del Judaísmo clásico y medieval [FFI2016-78171-P]", financiado por el Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad.’Abstract
In this article, I analyse the attribution of remedies and therapeutic procedures to women, anonymous in the main, embedded in a number of texts belonging to the medieval Hebrew corpus of literature on women's health care. By suggesting a classification of the ways in which both women and their healing activities are referred to, I intend to offer a framework that helps to identify Jewish (and non-Jewish) women's health agency from medical texts. In addition to textual analysis, I compare some of the mentions with evidences found in a variety of historical and literary sources for the sake of helping to contextualise them. In this article, I analyse the attribution of remedies and therapeutic procedures to women, anonymous in the main, embedded in a number of texts belonging to the medieval Hebrew corpus of literature on women's health care. By suggesting a classification of the ways in which both women and their healing activities are referred to, I intend to offer a framework that helps to identify Jewish (and non-Jewish) women's health agency from medical texts. In addition to textual analysis, I compare some of the mentions with evidences found in a variety of historical and literary sources for the sake of helping to contextualise them.