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Lädt ... Geschichte unter der Haut : ein Eisenacher Arzt und seine Patientinnen um 1730von Barbara Duden
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In this provocative study, Barbara Duden asserts that the most basic biological and medical terms we use to describe our own bodies - male and female, healthy and sick - are in fact cultural constructions. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)618.0943Technology Medicine and health Gynecology and PediatricsKlassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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Duden’s description of doctors’ place in society serves to set up her argument for the conflicting discourses of women’s bodies. According to Duden, “The lack of uniformity in training is important, since it tells us something about the conditions that shaped a person’s self-image, about the tensions between the academic self-image and a craftlike, practical competence” (pg. 54). This struggle played out in Storch’s interaction with his patients. Patients brought their complaints to the doctor, who diagnosed their ailments based on patient histories, and prescribed something to treat pain (pg. 154). Often, the patients requested specific treatments, giving them a degree of control over their treatment. Duden writes, “The women always had the last word. The judged the merits of the prescription and did so solely in accord with their own experiences” (pg. 156). Eighteenth century medicine conceived of gender and sex in manner that contradicts modern understandings. Duden writes, “Many of the manifestations that we clearly perceive as sex characteristics, were in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries not unequivocal signs for the difference between man and woman…The eye of culture sees in the order of nature what it expects to see” (pg. 113). To this end, doctors expected both men and women to bleed, though from different areas and at different intervals. Interestingly, Duden’s discussion contradicts Kuriyama’s claim that Western medicine avoids metaphor. Duden writes of the ability to describe pain, “The language of pain conveys an entire world view. As long as there was no classificatory landscape of the inner processes of the body, the pain that was to be described, which lurked invisible inside the body and could not be grasped objectively, had to be expressed in relation to a third phenomenon” (pg. 89). Further, “a metaphoric language reveals layers of perception precisely through its mediated structure, since it can speak only in a contextual relation” (pg. 89). Duden’s analysis of Storch’s records offers insight into the changing nature of medicine in the eighteenth century. ( )