“I had once the chance to see when I was performing my office of "Midwifry" Paesaggi anatomici nel "Midwives Book (1671) di Jane Sharp

In a cultural context dominated by men, Jane Sharp was the first English woman to have authored a midwifery treatise. The present essay highlights the originality of her Midwives Book (1671) in comparison with the previous male treatises, showing how she consciously exploited her male counterparts’...

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Main Author: Luca Baratta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Firenze University Press 2017-12-01
Series:LEA : Lingue e Letterature d'Oriente e d'Occidente
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/bsfm-lea/article/view/7766
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spelling doaj-c03d2c1ea55e4922993abec04e9270792020-11-25T03:24:40ZengFirenze University PressLEA : Lingue e Letterature d'Oriente e d'Occidente1824-484X2017-12-01610.13128/LEA-1824-484x-2234318527“I had once the chance to see when I was performing my office of "Midwifry" Paesaggi anatomici nel "Midwives Book (1671) di Jane SharpLuca Baratta In a cultural context dominated by men, Jane Sharp was the first English woman to have authored a midwifery treatise. The present essay highlights the originality of her Midwives Book (1671) in comparison with the previous male treatises, showing how she consciously exploited her male counterparts’ works, often taking position against them. In pursuing this purpose, the article analyzes the functions attributed to the use of a metaphorical language, identifying some specific rhetorical strategies: in particular way, Sharp’s insistence on her own visual experience as a certification of truth, and her use of metaphors taken from the natural world. Thus, the Midwives Book seems to take the shape of an “experiential journey” in the woman’s body which, in Sharp’s words, is no more the territory of mere speculation, but a real landscape, seen, contemplated, explored and described. https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/bsfm-lea/article/view/7766anatomyearly modern EnglandJane Sharplandscape
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Luca Baratta
spellingShingle Luca Baratta
“I had once the chance to see when I was performing my office of "Midwifry" Paesaggi anatomici nel "Midwives Book (1671) di Jane Sharp
LEA : Lingue e Letterature d'Oriente e d'Occidente
anatomy
early modern England
Jane Sharp
landscape
author_facet Luca Baratta
author_sort Luca Baratta
title “I had once the chance to see when I was performing my office of "Midwifry" Paesaggi anatomici nel "Midwives Book (1671) di Jane Sharp
title_short “I had once the chance to see when I was performing my office of "Midwifry" Paesaggi anatomici nel "Midwives Book (1671) di Jane Sharp
title_full “I had once the chance to see when I was performing my office of "Midwifry" Paesaggi anatomici nel "Midwives Book (1671) di Jane Sharp
title_fullStr “I had once the chance to see when I was performing my office of "Midwifry" Paesaggi anatomici nel "Midwives Book (1671) di Jane Sharp
title_full_unstemmed “I had once the chance to see when I was performing my office of "Midwifry" Paesaggi anatomici nel "Midwives Book (1671) di Jane Sharp
title_sort “i had once the chance to see when i was performing my office of "midwifry" paesaggi anatomici nel "midwives book (1671) di jane sharp
publisher Firenze University Press
series LEA : Lingue e Letterature d'Oriente e d'Occidente
issn 1824-484X
publishDate 2017-12-01
description In a cultural context dominated by men, Jane Sharp was the first English woman to have authored a midwifery treatise. The present essay highlights the originality of her Midwives Book (1671) in comparison with the previous male treatises, showing how she consciously exploited her male counterparts’ works, often taking position against them. In pursuing this purpose, the article analyzes the functions attributed to the use of a metaphorical language, identifying some specific rhetorical strategies: in particular way, Sharp’s insistence on her own visual experience as a certification of truth, and her use of metaphors taken from the natural world. Thus, the Midwives Book seems to take the shape of an “experiential journey” in the woman’s body which, in Sharp’s words, is no more the territory of mere speculation, but a real landscape, seen, contemplated, explored and described.
topic anatomy
early modern England
Jane Sharp
landscape
url https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/bsfm-lea/article/view/7766
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