Medicina

Textes de SANCHEZ, Samuel

Nombre de réponses : 3          1-3

"L"arrière plan antique, la contribution de la Grèce et de Rome"
Publié dans : Antoine Leca, Alexandre Lunel, Samuel Sanchez / Histoire du droit de la santé. Bordeaux, les Études hospitalières. Pages :13-26
Textes recensés dans le même document
Leca, Antoine, LUNEL, Alexandre, SANCHEZ, Samuel Cote BIU Santé Médecine : 198933
Méd. ancienne : médecine grecque et romaine fiche entrée le 23/01/2015
"Encadrement de la santé et "ménage à trois" : Église, municipalités et État royal"
Publié dans : Antoine Leca, Alexandre Lunel, Samuel Sanchez / Histoire du droit de la santé. Bordeaux, les Études hospitalières. Pages :27-154
Textes recensés dans le même document
Leca, Antoine, LUNEL, Alexandre, SANCHEZ, Samuel Cote BIU Santé Médecine : 198933
Méd. ancienne : médecine médiévale fiche entrée le 23/01/2015
Staging death: Silences and ventriloquisms of the dead body in medieval Spain (Spanish text)
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN, 2004, 257 pages
This dissertation examines the post-mortem life of three celebrated dead bodies from late medieval Castile: Prince Juan, Alvaro de Luna, and Philip the «Handsome.» This study reads the literary representations of the aristocrati dead body as a material object which promotes a secular debate capable of reformulating the apparently paradoxical relationship between secular power, religious doctrines, and mortality. From this perspective, this dissertation contributes to the investigation of the Medieval Spain's «cult of death» by focusing on the dead body as an authoritative instrument which, despite its inherently ephemeral nature, was used as a channel to disseminate messages designed to enact social and political agency. In contrast to the conventional and meager rites that surrounded the «good» death of Prince Juan, this dissertation argues that the practices conducted and the narratives constructed around the cadavers of Alvaro de Luna and Philip the «Handsome» by family members and social institutions offer us valuable insight into the formation of proto-national identity, royal authority, and social status. The analysis of the literary representations of these two cadavers sheds light on the ways in which their visibility and the theatricality of practices around them uniquely articulated a kind of political ventriloquism, thus creating a privileged site in the struggle for the political and social agency of their promoters. Working from evidence in contemporary poems, ballads, letters and chronicles, this dissertation shows how, despite the austerity of supposedly hegemonic religious discourse, the coexistence of secular practices of death, mourning and memoralization offered means for Castilian elites to challenge patterns of power and consolidate their own authority.
Sanchez-Sanchez, Samuel
Méd. ancienne : médecine médiévale fiche entrée le 27/03/2006

Nombre de réponses : 3          1-3