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Generating Bodies and Gendered Selves: The Rhetoric of Reproduction in Early Modern England PDF

261 Pages·2007·1.287 MB·English
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Preview Generating Bodies and Gendered Selves: The Rhetoric of Reproduction in Early Modern England

IN VIVO THE CULTURAL MEDIATIONS OF BIOMEDICAL SCIENCE Phillip Thurtle and Robert Mitchell, Series Editors IN VIVO THE CULTURAL MEDIATIONS OF BIOMEDICAL SCIENCE is dedicated to the interdisciplinary study of the medical and life sciences, with a focus on the scientific and cultural practices used to process data, model knowledge, and communicate about biomedical science. Through historical, artistic, media, social, and literary analysis, books in the series seek to understand and explain the key conceptual issues that animate and inform biomedical developments. THE TRANSPARENT BODY A Cultural Analysis of Medical Imaging BY JOSÉ VAN DIJCK GENERATING BODIES AND GENDERED SELVES The Rhetoric of Reproduction in Early Modern England BY EVE KELLER GENERATING BODIES AND GENDERED SELVES The Rhetoric of Reproduction in Early Modern England EVE KELLER A SAMUEL AND ALTHEA STROUM BOOK UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON PRESS SEATTLE / LONDON This book is published with the assistance Library of Congress of a grant from the Stroum Book Fund, Cataloging-in-Publication Data established through the generosity of Samuel and Althea Stroum. Keller, Eve, 1960– Generating bodies and gendered selves : © 2007 by the University of Washington Press the rhetoric of reproduction in early Printed in the United States of America modern England / Eve Keller. Design by Audrey Seretha Meyer p. ; cm. — (In vivo) 12 11 10 09 08 07 5 4 3 2 1 “A Samuel and Althea Stroum Book.” Includes bibliographical references and All rights reserved. No part of this publi- index. cation may be reproduced or transmitted ISBN 0-295-98641-7 (pbk. : alk. paper) in any form or by any means, electronic 1. Gynecology—England—History. or mechanical, including photocopy, 2. Human reproduction—England— recording, or any information storage History. 3. Obstetrics—England—History or retrieval system, without permission 4. Gynecology—Philosophy. I. Title. in writing from the publisher. II. Series: In vivo (Seattle, Wash.) [DNLM: 1. Gynecology—history— University of Washington Press England. 2. Reproduction—England. P.O. Box 50096, Seattle, WA 98145 U.S.A 3. Women’s Health—history—England. www.washington.edu/uwpress WP 11 FE5 K29g 2006] RG518.G7K45 2006 The paper used in this publication is 618.1’00942—dc22 2006016948 acid-free and 90percent recycled from at least 50percent post-consumer waste. It meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ansi z39.48-1984. To David, Jessye, and Avir, whom I adore CONTENTS acknowledgments ix list of abbreviations xi introduction 3 1 / On Either Side of the Early Modern Posthuman and Premodern Bodies and Selves 19 ANCIENT REVISIONS 2 / Subjectified Parts and Supervenient Selves Rewriting Galenism in Crooke’s Microcosmographia 47 3 / Fixing the Female Books of Practical Physic for Women 71 MODERN MODULATIONS 4 / Making Up for Losses The Workings of Gender in Harvey’s De generatione animalium 101 5 / Embryonic Individuals Mechanism, Embryology, and Modern Man 125 6 / The Masculine Subject of Touch Case Histories from the Birthing Room 156 epilogue 187 notes 191 bibliography 225 index 239 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I HAVE LIVED WITH THIS PROJECT FOR A LONG TIME; now that it nears completion, I am happy to acknowledge some of the debts, both personal and professional, that I have accrued along the way. Susan Greenfield has read much of the manuscript, offering insight and encour- agement in equal measure; others, including Michael McVaugh, Elizabeth Har- vey, Stuart Sherman, Jeffrey Masten, Catherine Weiss, and the two anonymous readers from the Press, pushed me to be both more coherent and more com- plete. Much of this material I have presented at various conferences of the Soci- ety for Literature, Science, and the Arts, an organization that embodies what I value most in academia: intellectual generosity, adventurous curiosity, and an abiding joy in conversation. I am grateful to all in SLSA who have helped me, especially Susan Squier and Richard Nash. SLSA also brought me to Phillip Thur- tle and Robert Mitchell, editors of In Vivo, and to Jacqueline Ettinger and Dipika Nath of the University of Washington Press, all of whom warmly welcomed both me and the early modern into their vision of the series. Three chapters in Generating Bodies and Gendered Selvesare expanded versions of previously published essays. Chapter 4 is adapted from an essay in Women’s Studies,pp. 131–62; © 1998, reproduced with permission of Taylor & Francis, Inc. (http://www.taylorandfrancis.com). Chapter 5 is adapted from “Embryonic Indi- viduals: The Rhetoric of Seventeenth-Century Embryology and the Construc- tion of Early-Modern Identity,” in Eighteenth-Century Studies, vol. 33, no. 3, pp. 321–48; © 2000 American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies; reprinted with permission of The Johns Hopkins University Press. Chapter 6 is adapted from “The Subject of Touch: Medical Authority in Early Modern Midwifery,” origi- ix

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