A cabinet of ancient medical curiosities Strange tales and surprising facts from the healing arts of Greece and Rome

J. C. McKeown

Book - 2017

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Subjects
Published
Oxford ; New York, NY : Oxford University Press [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
J. C. McKeown (author)
Physical Description
xiv, 268 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780190610432
9780190610449
  • Preface
  • Chapter I. Medicine, Religion, and Magic
  • Chapter II. The Doctor in Society
  • Chapter III. Attitudes to Doctors
  • Chapter IV. Some Famous Doctors
  • Chapter V. Anatomy
  • Chapter VI. Sex Matters
  • Chapter VII. Women and Children
  • Chapter VIII. Preventive Medicine
  • Chapter IX. Prognosis and Diagnosis
  • Chapter X. Particular Ailments and Conditions
  • Chapter XI. Treatment and Cures I
  • Chapter XII. Treatment and Cures II
  • Chapter XIII. General Medicine
  • Chapter XIV. Respice Finem
  • Glossary
  • Coin Images
  • Illustration Credits
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

McKeown, professor of classics at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and compiler of A Cabinet of Roman Curiosities and A Cabinet of Greek Curiosities, goes for a weird-but-true trifecta with this compilation of medical oddities from ancient Western civilizations, delivering a frightening, puzzling, thoughtful, and surprisingly engrossing survey. As well organized as it is erudite, the compendium tilts toward classics enthusiasts, but there's still plenty of material to amaze an audience outside the ivory tower. McKeown writes that his "chief aspiration is to provide glimpses into the world of medicine in the distant past that offer entertainment rather than enlightenment." That isn't quite true, of course. There is plenty of medical knowledge from antiquity recorded here that remains relevant in modernity. But those nuggets are far outnumbered by data that boggles the mind, or at least phenomena that seems ridiculous in the world of 21st-century medicine: a prescription for donkey's milk; the birth defect of a "hairy heart"; a disturbing catalogue of diseases outlined by Plutarch; and an astounding array of animal-based medicine touted in Dioscorides's Medical Material, including goat dung plasters and boiled viper meat. McKeown's well-organized and erudite survey is fascinating and enlightening, though best consumed in small doses. Illus. (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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