The Sick Child in Early Modern England, 1580-1720
Autor Hannah Newtonen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 apr 2014
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198713470
ISBN-10: 0198713479
Pagini: 262
Ilustrații: 4 black and white images
Dimensiuni: 158 x 235 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198713479
Pagini: 262
Ilustrații: 4 black and white images
Dimensiuni: 158 x 235 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
This is fine book from a young scholar of the history of medicine. ... There are several novalties in the book's topic and structure which make it praiseworthy. ... This is a thoughtful and reflective book which will be of interest to medical historians and historians of childhood in equal measure. ... this book has much to recommend it to those interested in medicine and social history.
What makes Newton's achievement impressive is the skill and determination with which she has investigated a huge range of medical literature to establish her case that children were seen, distinctively, as 'soft and weak, abounding in the humour blood'. ... This is a highly promising debut.
Hannah Newton's The Sick Child in Early Modern England, 1580-1720 is a very good book ... Due to her extremely thorough review of both primary and secondary sources, Newton provides a nuanced and detailed discussion that is a pleasure to read.
The Sick Child is a major contribution to the histories of childhood, the family, parentchild relationships, religion and medical care. Hannah Newton writes with impressive clarity and sensitivity, forging a powerful argument that children were recognised in medical treatises as distinct from adults.
Newton offers an innovating approach to the history of patients. ... With her courageous book Newton enriches academic discussion in the field of the history of patients, childhood and emotions. ... Newton's writing style is easy to understand, clear in the argumentation and a pleasure to read.
a consistently interesting study that creatively brings together the history of childhood, medicine, emotions, the body and religion in England from late Elizabethan to early Georgian times.
This book's value to historians of medicine is clear: Newton shows the important ways that age shaped patients' experiences, and she recovers those experiences among a broad range of children. This book surely will find its important place within scholarship on the history of illness as well as the history of children.
valuable and unusual insights into the experience of disease, pain, suffering and death of children in early modern England ... [the judging panel] liked the extraordinary and unusual approach to combine the social history of childhood, history of medicine and history of emotions ... particularly impressed by the way Hannah Newton combined scholarly rigor with empathy by giving a voice to children, mothers and fathers, and physicians. At the same time she contextualizes these personal accounts within a masterly presentation of the complex medical knowledge of the period. Her outstanding book has been reviewed enthusiastically in different scholarly journals. And after reading it, the jury could only agree with these reviews, and is very happy to award the prize to Hannah Newton.
What makes Newton's achievement impressive is the skill and determination with which she has investigated a huge range of medical literature to establish her case that children were seen, distinctively, as 'soft and weak, abounding in the humour blood'. ... This is a highly promising debut.
Hannah Newton's The Sick Child in Early Modern England, 1580-1720 is a very good book ... Due to her extremely thorough review of both primary and secondary sources, Newton provides a nuanced and detailed discussion that is a pleasure to read.
The Sick Child is a major contribution to the histories of childhood, the family, parentchild relationships, religion and medical care. Hannah Newton writes with impressive clarity and sensitivity, forging a powerful argument that children were recognised in medical treatises as distinct from adults.
Newton offers an innovating approach to the history of patients. ... With her courageous book Newton enriches academic discussion in the field of the history of patients, childhood and emotions. ... Newton's writing style is easy to understand, clear in the argumentation and a pleasure to read.
a consistently interesting study that creatively brings together the history of childhood, medicine, emotions, the body and religion in England from late Elizabethan to early Georgian times.
This book's value to historians of medicine is clear: Newton shows the important ways that age shaped patients' experiences, and she recovers those experiences among a broad range of children. This book surely will find its important place within scholarship on the history of illness as well as the history of children.
valuable and unusual insights into the experience of disease, pain, suffering and death of children in early modern England ... [the judging panel] liked the extraordinary and unusual approach to combine the social history of childhood, history of medicine and history of emotions ... particularly impressed by the way Hannah Newton combined scholarly rigor with empathy by giving a voice to children, mothers and fathers, and physicians. At the same time she contextualizes these personal accounts within a masterly presentation of the complex medical knowledge of the period. Her outstanding book has been reviewed enthusiastically in different scholarly journals. And after reading it, the jury could only agree with these reviews, and is very happy to award the prize to Hannah Newton.
Notă biografică
Dr Hannah Newton is a social historian of early modern England, specialising in the history of medicine, childhood, and the emotions. She undertook her PhD at the University of Exeter in 2006-2009 on the subject of 'The Sick Child in Early Modern England'. Dr Newton is now based in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Cambridge, as a Wellcome Trust Postdoctoral Fellow. Her postdoctoral project is about recovery and convalescence from illness in the early modern period.