Menstruation and the female body in early-modern England
Sara Read (Author)
"In early modern English medicine, the balance of fluids in the body was seen as the key to health. Menstruation was widely believed to regulate the blood level in the female body and so was extensively discussed in medical texts. In this book, Sara Read examines all forms of literature, from plays and poems, to life-writing, and compares these texts with the medical theories. Many of these literary representations show how early modern English women related to their bleeding bodies, both in their menstrual cycles and at other times of transition, from menarche to menopause. For example, how would a literate woman read about her body in the books which claimed to be guides for female health? How was menstruation presented to society in staged and printed works? As part of its attempt to recover the ways in which a woman in this era might have understood this aspect of her physiology, this book examines the key moments when menstruation and related changes were at the forefront of her experience of living in a female body"-- Provided by publisher
Print Book,English, 2013
1st editionView all formats and editions
Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire, 2013
History
xii, 248 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.
9781137355027, 9781349470037, 1137355026, 1349470031
852225082
Introduction: 'Those Sweet and Benign Humours that Nature Sends Monthly': Reading Menstruation and Vaginal Bleeding
1. 'What a small Excess is called Flooding': The Language of Menstruation and Transitional Bleedings
2. 'Having the Benefit of Nature': Menarche and Female Adolescence
3. 'Full sixteen and never yet had those': Representations of Early or Delayed Menarche
4. 'Women's Monthly Sickness': Accounting for Menstruation
5. 'Wearing of the Double Clout': Dealing with Menstrual Flow in Practice and in Religious Doctrine
6. 'The Flower of Virginity': Hymenal Bleeding and Becoming a Woman
7. The 'Cleansing of the Flowers after the Birth': Managing Pregnancy and Post-Partum Bleeding
8. 'Women Grieve to Thinke they Must be Old': Representations of Menopause
Conclusion