Practicing between Earth and Heaven: Women Healers in Seventeenth-Century Bologna
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Pomata, GiannaEditorial
Universidad de Granada
Date
1999Referencia bibliográfica
Pomata, Gianna. «Practicing between earth and heaven : women healers in seventeenth-century Bologna». Dynamis: Acta Hispanica ad Medicinae Scientiarumque Historiam Illustrandam, 1999, Vol. 19, p. 119-143, https://raco.cat/index.php/Dynamis/article/view/106145.
Résumé
In the highly stratified medical system of seventeenth-century Bologna, women
healers occupied a low-rank position. Officially women could practice medicine only as
midwives or as holders of permits for the sale of patent medicines. Women were a
relatively marginal group even within unauthorized medical practice. Of the criminal
proceedings against unlicensed healers only 12% were directed against women. In
contrast, women were prominent in religious healing-as shown by the record of
healing miracles attributed to female saints, and the importance of female convents as
centers of supernatural healing. The different status of women in each case might be
related to the different role of the body in lay and religious medical practices. While
contact with the ~holyb odiesn of the saints was absolutely central in religious healing,
chealing with the body. was considered a mark of inferiority in lay medical practice.