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History 5311 Spring 2012 The history of medicine in early modern Europe 7:00-9:50 p.m., UH 321 Colloquium in early modern Europe Prof. Elisabeth Cawthon Wed. nights, Scope of course: This is a readings course on medical history in Europe in the early modern era, broadly defined--taking in both the late 1400s and the long 18th century. We will consider several queries in the class--both as a group and in writing individual essays. What are the classic sources that scholars employ? Who are the gray eminences in this field? What are the trends among scholars who study early modern medicine? In which sub-fields of medical history is the most exciting new research taking place? About which issues do medical historians often disagree? Where do you as a scholar of early modern history fit into the scholarly debates? I welcome chats about the assignments or my assessments. Aside from office hours we can work out ways to chat electronically or by phone, most days Learning objectives: (1) One goal is to familiarize ourselves with recent scholarship in this field so that we can name long-time experts and leading new scholars, and describe their work. (2) Another expectation is that we will hone our skills in comparing and contrasting historians’ views on key topics in the field. We will demonstrate those skills through written comments and conversation. (3)We also want to sharpen our ability to assess scholars’ use of both primary and secondary sources, and to evaluate their argumentative and stylistic skills. Again, we will show that increased ability in papers and discussions. Required books: We will read 5 books in common, and then each person will read 4 other books as part of our required writing assignments. Yes, that is 9 books in all! 1. We will discuss only portions of the textbook on our second class meeting night. Otherwise you will read what you need of it, to assist you as you complete the other readings. 1 Lindemann, Mary. Medicine and Society in Early Modern Europe. CUP, 2010 [used from $27.15] Then in successive weeks we will read more specialized books in common. Each of these is a well-regarded treatment of a foundational topic in medical history: 2. the physician-biography: Trevor-Roper, Hugh. Europe’s Physician, Yale, 2006. [used from $2.69] 3. presentation of a primary source: Siegemund, Justine, The Court Midwife (L. Tatlock, trans) Chicago, 2005. [used $13.99] 4. the historical novel/plague Brooks, Geraldine. Year of Wonders, 2001. [used from $.01] 5. the history of a single disease There is choice on this assignment; you may pick a single disease on which to read. If you do not have a favorite disease, I suggest “the French pox” via this book: Arrizabalaga, Jon, Henderson, John, and French, Roger. The Great Pox: The French Disease in Renaissance Europe. Yale, 1997. [used from $18.00] Writing and other assignments: There are three major assignments in the course: two essays and a leading of class discussion: 1. You will complete one essay in the first half of the course, as a commentary that focuses on one of our shared (common) readings. 2. Just after midterm (March 21), an essay will be due on one set of readings concerning a topic that interests you, chosen from among the topics we will discuss after Spring Break. 3. In the second portion of the course, we will center our discussion around oral reports from each of you on one set of readings that you have chosen. These in-class presentations are required and will be graded. You may NOT lead a discussion on the same topic that you have written about for your essay that was turned in on March 21. 2 ALL WRITING ASSIGNMENTS WILL BE SUBMITTED ELECTRONICALLY, THROUGH THE UNIVERSITY’S SAFE ASSIGN SYSTEM ON BLACKBOARD. If you have difficulty in submitting in this manner, then simply email a copy of your paper and I will submit it to SafeAssign manually. I will acknowledge receipt as soon as possible, noting in my email the time and day of your submission per the email or SafeAssign systems. In addition, you will receive a percentage point for each day that you attend class—up to 10 possible percentage points during the semester. We have 12 class meetings. In effect, then, you could miss two class meetings with no effect on your grade. Please use those “free” absences wisely; it is best to reserve them for true emergencies and come to class each week! Guidelines for writing assignment #1: Choose one of the assignments that is due between February 1 and Feb. 22. Please note that the assignments are spelled out during the week before they are due. Compose a 10-page response to my “prompts” as listed on the syllabus. You MAY use book reviews to assist you, but please make certain to cite all sources that you employed, icnluding any reviews. Use 11-12 point type and sensible margins). Please think carefully about a title. Please use Turabian/Chicago Manual of Style formatting, which is what the UT Arlington graduate school requires for theses. There are several sample forms available, as well as links tostyle manuals, at: http://grad.pci.uta.edu/students/services/thesis/ I will evaluate your papers based on their attention to the style guidelines, grammar, reasoning, use of illustrative detail, selection of an appropriate title, and accuracy in answering the quesitons I posed. Please note that these essays will be due on the day we discuss the material in question, but they must be submitted BEFORE class. Guidelines for writing assignment #2: First, please choose two topics from among the following: midwifery, the plague, patient perspectives, world history, madness and medicine, the body. One of these will be the subject of a written report, due March 21; the other will be the basis of your leading of a class discussion, between March 21 and April 25. How should you get access to the books you chooose? Let me suggest that you use interlibrary loan to secure any of these books that are not available in our library. PLEASE do this as early in the semester as possible! Be aware, though, that the books may arrive all at once and you will not have access to them for long; once they arrive you will 3 need to be ready to read them quickly, take notes on them thoroughly, and then return them. Of course you also may purchase the books. Fortunately, online book sales have made this less expensive than buying new. For your convenience I have provided some recent prices. Please note that I do NOT want economics to prohibit your getting access to the books you need. If cost is an issue, just let me know; I will try to find books for you to borrow, if necessary, or I will consider substituting one of the books listed here, for another that is more affordable or accessible. Please write 1 essay, of 10 pages (12 point type, sensible margins). Use Chicago Manual of Style/Turabian formatting for footnotes or endnotes; I ahve no preference for footnotes over endnotes. Please do provide a separate bibliography if you go outside the books listed here. For this assignment I strongly suggest NOT accessing published or online reviews of the books. They tends to color your reactions and I would like your fresh views when you are reading and writing. Please note that these essays will be due on the day we discuss the material in question, but they must be submitted BEFORE class. Your foci in the papers should be the following: *the basic story told by each writer (about 1 page of the paper for each writer, or about 2 pages total) *comparisons and contrasts between the two writers in argument and presentation. (about 2-3 pages total in the paper). In addition, please include the other items that I mention on the syllabus, in connection with this assignment. *observations on the writers’ use of sources (1-2 pages total in the paper) how the writers’ works fit into a larger understanding of European medical history in the early modern era. *In particular, explain how the books within each assignment dovetail with (or perhaps contradict) Lindemann’s vision of early modern medical history. (about 2 pages total; this section should be mostly toward the paper’s end) *Begin with a thesis statement or paragraph that mentions your sources, and end with a concluding statement or paragraph that wraps up your paper’s argument. 4 Guidelines for your leading of class discussion, between March 21 and April 25 (major assessment #3 in the course): We will structure these so that (I hope) not too many people are in charge on any given evening. You may proceed as an individual or work with yoru colleagues to do a group presentation if you are focused on the same topic. You will be graded individually, though; if you do a group presentation I will require that each individual submit a description of her/his part in the program. Your goal is to lead the discussion so that class members who have not read the books for this week will get a thorough exposure to the material. Creativity counts, as does attention to the two authors’ arguments and their use of sources, as well as their employing of examples. You may use handouts and/or computer materials, but they are not required. Keep in mind that you are the expert on the topic for your particular evening! Please do not make substitutions to the listed readings without prior approval from me. Here are all of the assessments for the course, listed in table form: Nature of assignment Comment, per assignments on syllabus p. 2, above Amount to read 1 book plus occasional shorter readings Basis of assessment Attention to guidelines,style, reasoning, use of detail, title—see p. 2 above Compare and contrast, per assignment on syllabus p. 2, above Leading discussion on topic other than topic for written report that was turned in on March 21. Class attendance 2 books, as specified— substitutions only with permission Attention to guidelines,style, reasoning, use of detail, title selection --see p. 3 above knowledge of material, poise, creativity, use of appropriate examples see p. 4, jsut above 2 books, as specified— substitutions only with permission 1% for each class attended Date due Feb. 1 or Feb. 8 or Feb. 15 or Feb. 22 BEFORE class starts. March 21, BEFORE class starts March March April April April April 21 or 28 or 4 or 11 or 18 or 25 % of course grade 30% 30% 30% 10% maximum 5 SCHEDULE OF CLASS MEETINGS Wed. Jan. 18: of databases such as introduction to the course, including the use JSTOR and the Oxford DNB For next week: Pick a chapter of Mary Lindemann’s Medicine and Society in Early Modern Europe on which to concentrate. Be prepared to explain your choice to the class. Be ready to put forward Lindemann’s key points in your chapter, for the class. Pay special attention to Lindemann’s summary of major themes in medical history, use of sources, both primary and secondary. Wed. Jan. 25: discussion of Lindemann’s text For next week: Read Europe’s Physician, by Hugh Trevor- Roper. Find two reviews of this book in scholarly journals using JSTOR Explain what the reviewers emphasize about the place of this book in TrevorRoper’s career, about the book’s position in early modern history. Note contrasts and similarities in their reviews. Wed. Feb. 1: discussion of Trevor-Roper For next week: Read The Court Midwife, by Justin Siegemund. What challenges does Siegemund encounter in presenting this primary source to modern readers? 6 How is she successful? Where does her explication need improvement? Wed., Feb. 8: discussion of Siegemund For next week: Read Geraldine Brooks’ Year of Wonders. How does this episode lend itself well to novelization? What does Brooks have difficulty conveying, that a more traditional historical treatment could elucidate? How does this book compare with other historical novels that you have read? Wed. Feb. 15: discussion of Brooks For next week: Pick a single disease in early modern Europe, and read a book concerning its history that is set largely in early modern Europe. I suggest Jon Arriabalalga, et al, The French Pox. How does your author contextualize the disease? How successfully are medical matters described? How much does the book treat national history? –world history? Wed. Feb. 22: discussion of your “single disease” books For next class meeting, which is after Spring Break, please write your second essay in the course, on one of the topics listed below. This assignment will be turned in on Wed., March 21, no matter which topic you have chosen. In addition, you will be responsible for helping lead the discussion of another week’s books. In effect then, you will be preparing one written and one oral report, on two separate topics during the second half of the course. Wed. Feb. 29: no class Wed. March 7: no class, but please consider attending the Webb Lectures keynote address, which is on a European medieval history topic: 7:00, Rosebud Theater, Unievrsity Center Wed. March 14: no class: Spring Break 7 Wed. March 21: discussion of midwifery Broomhall, Women’s Medical Work in Early Modern France, 2004, Manchester UP [$22.19 new] and Gelbart, Nina. The King’s Midwife, U of CA Press, 1999. [used from $3.11] Wed. March 28: discussion of the plague Cohn, Samuel K. Cultures of Plague: Medical Thought at the End of the Renaissance OUP, 2010 [$75...] OR one of Stephen Porter’s books on the plague in London: Lord have mercy upon us: London’s plague years, Tempus, 2005, from $4.28 used] or The Plagues of London, The History Press, 2004 [new and used from $13.74] AND Alexander, John T. Bubonic Plague in early Modern Russia: Public Health and Urban Disaster, OUP, 2002 [used from $4.99] PLEASE NOTE that I do want you to use the Alexander book if at all possible. Wed. April 4: discussion of patient perspectives Solomon, Michael, Fictions of Well-Being: Sickly Readers and Vernacular Medical Writing in late Medieval and Early Modern Spain, U of PA Press, 2010 [used from $30.50] and Pomata, Gina (author, trans) Contracting a Cure: Patients, Healers, and the Law in Early Modern Bologna, Johns Hopkins, 1998. [used from $6.90] Wed. April 11: discussion of medicine in the context of world history Cook, Harold J. Matters of Exchange. Yale, 2008 [used from $9.28] and Harkness, Deborah. The Jewel House: Elizabethan London and the Scientific Revolution. Yale, 2008. [used from $6.89] Wed., April 18: discusssion of madness and medicine Midelfort, H.C. Eric. A History of Madness in 16th century Germany. Stanford, 2000 [used from $11.60] 8 and Per Olov Enquist. The Royal Physician’s Visit, 2002, Simon and Schuster (this is a novel) [used from $.01] Wed. April 25: discussion of the body in medical history Carlino, Andrea, Tedeschi, John, and Tedeschi, Anna. Books of the Body. 1999 Chicago. [used from $23.50] and Kerwin, William. Beyond the Body: The Boundaries of Medicine and English Renaissance Drama, U of Massachusetts Press, 2005. [new from $9.00] 9