Women and medicine in the French Enlightenment

the debate over "maladies des femmes"

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April 12, 2025 | History

Women and medicine in the French Enlightenment

the debate over "maladies des femmes"

In Women and Medicine in the French Enlightenment Lindsay Wilson takes a new approach to the social history of medicine by focusing on the key role that women played as both providers and recipients of health care during the Ancien Regime. Wilson pays special attention to three medical controversies involving maladies des femmes in eighteenth-century France: the "miraculous cures" claimed by the Convulsionaries of St. Medard, the uncertainty over the maximum length of pregnancy (and its implications for the legitimacy of heirs) and the debate over the medical effectiveness of mesmerism. Wilson's analysis of these debates reveals how social and political concerns affected the medical community's efforts to establish an enlightened science of medicine which would, in turn, legitimize its own authority.

But because the issues of legitimacy, hierarchy and authority raised by the medical causes celebres resonated so deeply throughout French society, debate extended far beyond medical circles to an increasingly engaged public. Such debate reflected a significant shift in the center of politics from the institutions of court, academy, and parlement to journals, theaters, and the streets. Wilson's description of these debates provides insight into the forces that were transforming the family, the church, corporate society, and the state on the eve of the Revolution. She argues for a re-assessment of a period that has been all too easily categorized as an age of triumph - either for enlightenment or for repression. Her work also offers concrete examples of the ways in which sexual symbolism can he employed to maintain social order or promote change.

Based on medical treatises, medical topographies, official reports, judicial documents, physicians' correspondence, and memoirs of eighteenth-century women, Women and Medicine in the French Enlightenment is a thoroughly interdisciplinary work that will appeal to anyone with an interest in the social history of medicine, women's studies, Enlightenment thought, and French social history.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
246

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 215-236) and index.

Published in
Baltimore

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
306.4/61/094409033
Library of Congress
R505 .W55 1993, R505.W55 1993

The Physical Object

Pagination
vii, 246 p. ;
Number of pages
246

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL1713316M
Internet Archive
womenmedicineinf0000wils
ISBN 10
080184438X
LCCN
92015475
OCLC/WorldCat
25677441
LibraryThing
1377727
Goodreads
3263573

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL4288364W

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