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Toward
the end of the Middle Ages, medical writers and philosophers began
to devote increasing attention to what they called “women’s
secrets,” by which they meant female sexuality and generation.
At the same time, Italian physicians and surgeons began to open
human bodies in order to study their functions and the illnesses
that afflicted them, culminating in the great illustrated anatomical
treatise of Andreas Vesalius, in 1543. Katharine Park traces these
two closely related developments through a series of case studies
of women whose bodies were dissected after their deaths: an abbess,
a lactating virgin, several patrician wives and mothers, and an
executed criminal. Drawing on texts and images, she explores the
history of women’s bodies in Italy between the late thirteenth
and the mid-sixteenth centuries in the context of family identity,
religious observance, and women’s health care.
Secrets of Women explodes the myth that medieval religious prohibitions
hindered the practice of human dissection in medieval and Renaissance
Italy, arguing that female bodies, real and imagined, played a
central role in the history of anatomy during that time. The opened
corpses of holy women revealed sacred objects, while the opened
corpses of wives and mothers yielded crucial information about
where babies came from and about the forces that shaped their vulnerable
flesh. In the process, what male writers knew as the “secrets
of women” came to symbolize the most difficult challenges
posed by human bodies — challenges that dissection promised
to overcome. Thus Park demonstrates the centrality of gender to
the development of early modern anatomy through a study of women’s
bodies and men’s attempts to know them and, through them,
to know their own.
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