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Rhetoric, Medicine, and the Woman Writer, 1600-1700 Lyn Bennett (Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia)

Rhetoric, Medicine, and the Woman Writer, 1600-1700 By Lyn Bennett (Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia)

Rhetoric, Medicine, and the Woman Writer, 1600-1700 by Lyn Bennett (Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia)


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Summary

Concerned with rhetoric's role in shaping knowledge, culture, and society, this book shows how writers of both sexes engaged the discourse of learned medicine. Will appeal to students and researchers of early modern authors as well as those interested in the histories of gender, medicine, and rhetoric.

Rhetoric, Medicine, and the Woman Writer, 1600-1700 Summary

Rhetoric, Medicine, and the Woman Writer, 1600-1700 by Lyn Bennett (Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia)

How did physicians come to dominate the medical profession? Lyn Bennett challenges the seemingly self-evident belief that scientific competence accounts for physicians' dominance. Instead, she argues that the whole enterprise of learned medicine was, in large measure, facilitated by an intensely classical education that included extensive training in rhetoric, and that this rhetorical training is ultimately responsible for the achievement of professional dominance. Bennett examines previously unexplored connections among writers and genres as well as competing livelihoods and classes. Engaging the histories of rhetoric, medicine, literature, and culture throughout, she goes on to focus specifically on the work of women who professed as well as practiced medicine. Pointing to some of the ways women's writing shapes realities of body, mind, and spirit as it negotiates social, cultural, and professional ideologies of gender, this book offers an important corrective to some long-held beliefs about women's role in early modern discourse.

Rhetoric, Medicine, and the Woman Writer, 1600-1700 Reviews

'Lyn Bennett's ... detailed new book offers an original perspective on the development of the medical profession in the seventeenth century.' Aurelie Griffin, Modern Language Review

About Lyn Bennett (Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia)

Lyn Bennett is an associate professor of English at Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia. Her interest in rhetoric, writing, and medicine informs her teaching as well as her research. She is the author of Women Writing of Divinest Things: Rhetoric in the Poetry of Pembroke, Wroth, and Lanyer (2004) and her work also appears in publications as diverse as Christianity and Literature, Genre, and the Journal of Medical Humanities.

Table of Contents

Introduction. 'Their plausible rhetoric'; Part I. Rhetoric and Medicine: 1. 'Another mans profession': physicians and clerics; 2. 'Onely the learned': physicians, empirics, and women; 3. 'An eloquent tongue': physicians and patients; Part II. The Woman Writer: 4. 'Publishing those truthes': women and affliction; 5. 'Hard words and rhetoricall phrases': women and learned medicine; 6. 'A bare physician stuft with words': women and domestic healing.

Additional information

NLS9781108441308
9781108441308
1108441300
Rhetoric, Medicine, and the Woman Writer, 1600-1700 by Lyn Bennett (Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia)
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2021-04-01
211
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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