Treating the Secret Disease: Sex, Sin, and Authority in Eighteenth-Century Venereal Cases
This article looks at cases of venereal disease from the early 1700s and how healers presented themselves as shrewd interpreters of patients' bodies and souls. Because the disease was so stigmatizing, patients were said to be unreliable narrators of their own symptoms and health histories. Prac...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Bulletin of the history of medicine 2017-12, Vol.91 (4), p.685-712 |
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description | This article looks at cases of venereal disease from the early 1700s and how healers presented themselves as shrewd interpreters of patients' bodies and souls. Because the disease was so stigmatizing, patients were said to be unreliable narrators of their own symptoms and health histories. Practitioners, in turn, exhibited diagnostic expertise by sagely navigating such constraints. They characterized themselves as medical detectives who gathered clues and made diagnoses in spite of patients' alleged lies and omissions. Such work entailed moral integrity, astute observations, and the ability to persuade patients to divulge their most shameful sexual secrets. These findings illuminate how a particular disease shaped constructions of medical expertise, as well as the details of early modern medical practice that we rarely have the privilege of seeing. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1353/bhm.2017.0078 |
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subjects | 18th century Disease Gender History of medicine and histology History, 18th Century Humans Interpreters London Medical practices Medicine Patients Persuasion Physician-Patient Relations Sexually transmitted diseases Sexually Transmitted Diseases - history Sexually Transmitted Diseases - prevention & control Sexually Transmitted Diseases - psychology STD Syphilis Womens health |
title | Treating the Secret Disease: Sex, Sin, and Authority in Eighteenth-Century Venereal Cases |
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