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    Medicine and the Making of Roman Women: Gender, Nature, and Authority from Celsus to Galen

    Medicine and the Making of Roman Women by Flemming, Rebecca;

    Gender, Nature, and Authority from Celsus to Galen

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 222.50
      • The price is estimated because at the time of ordering we do not know what conversion rates will apply to HUF / product currency when the book arrives. In case HUF is weaker, the price increases slightly, in case HUF is stronger, the price goes lower slightly.

        100 458 Ft (95 675 Ft + 5% VAT)
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      • Discounted price 90 413 Ft (86 108 Ft + 5% VAT)

    100 458 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP Oxford
    • Date of Publication 21 December 2000

    • ISBN 9780199240029
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages466 pages
    • Size 223x147x29 mm
    • Weight 860 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    Dr Flemming has written a book about women and medicine in the first centuries of the Roman Empire, an important but neglected period. It is about female medical practitioners and patients in the Roman world, what male doctors wrote about women, how they understood them, and the wider effects their ideas and writings had upon women's lives.

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    Long description:

    In this book Dr Flemming includes new translations of some of the works of medical practitioners from Celsus, writing during the reign of Tiberius, to Galen, whose career ended under the Severans, and puts their ideas about women's bodies in their social and philosophical contexts.

    Relations between women and medicine are now a major area of historical enquiry, but the Roman imperial era, despite the plentiful material it offers and the critical role it plays in the formation of the Western medical tradition, has received less than its fair share of the attention. This book seeks to redress the balance as it investigates female involvement in the manifold medical activities of the Roman world: how women fared as practitioners and patients, how they were understood and described in the copious medical writings of the period, and what effects those understandings and descriptions had in wider society. Dr Flemming examines both the contribution of medicine to gender in the Roman Empire, and the contribution of gender to medicine, and argues that the particularities of the Roman relationship between the two has much to reveal about how systems of sexual difference work in general.

    The book delivers more than it promises ... important book.

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