Artisans of the body in early modern Italy
Identities, families and masculinities
By Sandra Cavallo
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- Format: Paperback
- ISBN: 978-0-7190-8151-4
- Pages: 296
- Price: £17.99
- Published Date: June 2010
- Series: Gender in History
Description
This groundbreaking study explores the role of those involved in various aspects of the care, comfort and appearance of the body in seventeenth and early eighteenth-century Italy, bringing to light the strong cultural affinities and social ties between barber-surgeons and the apparently distant trades of jeweller, tailor, wigmaker and upholsterer.
Drawing on contemporary understandings of the body, the author shows that shared concerns about health and well-being permeated the professional cultures of these medical and non-medical occupations. At the same time the detailed analysis of the life-course, career patterns and family experience of 'artisans of the body' offers unprecedented insight into the world of the urban middling sorts.
The book will represent essential reading for scholars and students of gender, family and urban history in the early modern age, and will equally appeal to historians of the body and of the medical occupations.
Contents
List of plates
List of captions
List of figures
List of tables
Acknowledgements
List of abbreviations
Introduction
1. The view of the body of an ordinary surgeon
2. Health, beauty and hygiene: the broad domain of a barber-surgeon's duties
3. Barber-surgeons and artisans of the body
4. The place in society of artisans of the body
5. Social and kinship ties
6. Age, working relationships and the marketplace
7. Women in the body crafts
8. The weak father
9. Respectable men
10. The good surgeon
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
Author
Sandra Cavallo is Professor of Early Modern History at Royal Holloway, University of London