Monstrosity, Bodies, and Knowledge in Early Modern England
Title
Monstrosity, Bodies, and Knowledge in Early Modern England
Subtitle
Curiosity to See and Behold
Price
€ 136,00 excl. VAT
ISBN
9789462986671
Format
Hardback
Number of pages
290
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Also available as
eBook PDF - € 135,99
Table of Contents
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Acknowledgments
Dedication
Conventions and Abbreviations
Preface: A Note about Form
Étude 1: An Anomalous Birth
Chapter 1: Introduction: Monstrosity, Disability, and Knowledge
Étude 2: A Newsworthy Event
Chapter 2: Monstrous Print
Étude 3: A Popular Attraction
Chapter 3: Monstrous Shows
Étude 4: The Expert Visitor
Chapter 4: The Royal Society
Étude 5: A Decorative Commodity
Chapter 5: Visual Culture
Étude 6: The Lawsuit
Chapter 6: Conclusion: Autonomy, Agency, and Unfree Labour
Bibliographical Abbreviations
Primary Sources: Archival
Primary Sources: Printed, Visual, Material, Modern Editions
Secondary Sources .

Whitney Dirks

Monstrosity, Bodies, and Knowledge in Early Modern England

Curiosity to See and Behold

In 1680, the poor cottager Mary Herring gave birth to conjoined twins. At two weeks of age, they were kidnapped to be shown for money, and their deaths shortly thereafter gave rise to a four-year legal battle over ownership and income. The Herring twins’ microhistory weaves throughout this book, as the chapter structure alternates between the family’s ordeal and the broader cultural context of how so-called ‘monstrous births’ (a contemporary term for deformed humans and animals) were discussed in cheap print, exhibited in London’s pubs and coffeehouses, examined by the Royal Society, portrayed in visual culture, and litigated in London’s legal courts. This book ties together social and medical history, Disability Studies, and Monster Studies to argue that people discussed unusual bodies in early modern England because they provided newsworthy entertainment, revealed the will of God, and demonstrated the internal workings of Nature.
Author

Whitney Dirks

Whitney Dirks received her PhD in History at The Ohio State University in 2013. Her research on bodies and unusual anatomies in early modern England is grounded in social history and interacts with a number of interdisciplinary fields: Disability, Fat, Sexuality, and Monster Studies. She is particularly driven by microhistorical approaches and the allure of diving deeply into her source material – conducting close readings of medical treatises, legal cases, and popular print – while exploring connections to broader social concerns, such as Othering and constructions of normalcy.