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MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
Marvels of Medicine makes a compelling case for including sixteenth century medical and surgical writing in the critical frameworks we now use to think about a genealogy of cultural expression in Latin America. Focusing on a small group of practitioners who differed in their levels of training, but who shared the common experience of having left Spain to join colonial societies in the making, this book analyses the paths their texts charted to attitudes and political positions that would come to characterize a criollo mode of enunciation. Unlike the accounts of first explorers, which sought to amaze audiences back in Europe with descriptions of strange and astonishing lands, these texts instead engaged the marvellous in an effort to supersede it, stressing the value of sensorial experience and of verifying information through repetition and demonstration. Vernacular medical writing became an unlikely early platform for a new form of regionally anchored discourse that demanded participation in a global intellectual conversation, yet found itself increasingly relegated to the margins. In responding to that challenge, anatomical treatises, natural histories and surgical manuals exceeded the bounds set by earlier templates becoming rich, hybrid narratives that were as concerned with science as with portraying the lives and sensibilities of women and men in early colonial Mexico.
Contents:
Introduction
Medical books and colonial Latin American literature
Chapter 1
The surgeon's secrets: the medical travel narrative of Pedro Arias de Benavides
Chapter 2
Irreconcilable differences?: anatomy, physiology and the New World body
Chapter 3
Weakening the sex: the medicalization of female gender identity in New Spain
Chapter 4
Contested medical knowledge and regional self-fashioning
Conclusion
Epilogue
Works cited
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Publication date: October, 2020
Pages: 224
Weight: 652g
Availability: Contact supplier
Subcategories: General Issues