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Sex Sickness And Slavery Illness In The Antebellum South Marli F Weiner

  • SKU: BELL-9964042
Sex Sickness And Slavery Illness In The Antebellum South Marli F Weiner
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Sex Sickness And Slavery Illness In The Antebellum South Marli F Weiner instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Illinois Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 8.08 MB
Pages: 289
Author: Marli F. Weiner, Mayzie Hough
ISBN: 9780252080531, 025208053X
Language: English
Year: 2012

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Sex Sickness And Slavery Illness In The Antebellum South Marli F Weiner by Marli F. Weiner, Mayzie Hough 9780252080531, 025208053X instant download after payment.

Marli F. Wiener skillfully integrates the history of medicine with social and intellectual history in this study of how race and sex complicated medical treatment in the antebellum South. Sex, Sickness, and Slavery argues that Southern physicians' scientific training and practice uniquely entitled them to formulate medical justification for the imbalanced racial hierarchies of the period. Challenged with both helping to preserve the slave system (by acknowledging and preserving clear distinctions of race and sex) and enhancing their own authority (with correct medical diagnoses and effective treatment), doctors sought to understand bodies that did not necessarily fit into neat dichotomies or agree with suggested treatments.
Focusing on Southern states from Virginia to Alabama, Weiner examines medical and lay perspectives on the body through a range of sources, including medical journals, notes, diaries, daybooks, and letters. These personal and revealing sources show how physicians, medical students, and patients--both free whites and slaves--felt about vulnerability to disease and mental illnesses, how bodily differences between races and sexes were explained, and how emotions, common sense, working conditions, and climate were understood to have an effect on the body.
Physicians' authority did not go uncontested, however. Weiner also describes the ways in which laypeople, both black and white, resisted medical authority, clearly refusing to cede explanatory power to doctors without measuring medical views against their own bodily experiences or personal beliefs. Expertly drawing the dynamic tensions during this period in which Southern culture and the demands of slavery often trumped science, Weiner explores how doctors struggled with contradictions as medicine became a key arena for debate over the meanings of male and female, sick and well, black and white, North and South.

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