ABSTRACT

Through close analysis of texts, cultural and civic communities, and intellectual history, the papers in this collection, for the first time, propose a dynamic relationship between rhetoric and medicine as discourses and disciplines of cure in early modern Europe. Although the range of theoretical approaches and methodologies represented here is diverse, the essays collectively explore the theories and practices, innovations and interventions, that underwrite the shared concerns of medicine, moral philosophy, and rhetoric: care and consolation, reading, policy, and rectitude, signinference, selfhood, and autonomy-all developed and refined at the intersection of areas of inquiry usually thought distinct. From Italy to England, from the sixteenth through to the mid-eighteenth century, early modern moral philosophers and essayists, rhetoricians and physicians investigated the passions and persuasion, vulnerability and volubility, theoretical intervention and practical therapy in the dramas, narratives, and disciplines of public and private cure. The essays are relevant to a wide range of readers, including cultural, literary, and intellectual historians, historians of medicine and philosophy, and scholars of rhetoric.

chapter |36 pages

Introduction

Reading Physicians

chapter |28 pages

The Anatomical Web

Literary Dissection from Castiglione to Cromwell

chapter |26 pages

Responses to Vulnerability

Medicine, Politics and the Body in Descartes and Spinoza

chapter |22 pages

The Many Rhetorical Personae of an Early Modern Physician

Girolamo Cardano on Truth and Persuasion

chapter |34 pages

You've Got to Have Soul

Understanding the Passions in Early Modern Culture

chapter |22 pages

“The Babel Event”

Language, Rhetoric, and Burton's Infinite Symptom

chapter |14 pages

Medicine's Political Rhetoric

The Case of Bertini's La medicina difesa

chapter |4 pages

Afterword

The Place of Medicine in a General Account of Early Modern Intellectual History