Healing, Performance and Ceremony in the Writings of Three Early Modern Physicians: Hippolytus Guarinonius and the Brothers Felix and Thomas Platter
M.A. Katritzky is Barbara Wilkes Research Fellow in Theatre Studies in
the Literature Department of The Open University, UK, and author of The
Art of Commedia: A study in the commedia dell'arte 1560-1620 with
special reference to the visual records (2006) and Women, Medicine and
Theatre 1500-1750: Literary Mountebanks and Performing Quacks (2007).
- 451 pages
- Ashgate Pub Co
- ISBN-13: 978-0754667070
In early modern Europe medicine and theatre were often regarded as part
of the same popular culture. Itinerant medical 'quacks' and troupes of
actors were both integral parts of everyday life, each drawing upon
theatricality to attract customers and promote their services. In this
study, the writings of three renowned physicians - the Swiss Platter
brothers and their Austrian colleague Guarinonius - are used to explore
the often neglected interfaces between healing and performance. Their
descriptions of German, French and Italian travelling players are
examined in detail, with particular emphasis on the reaction of these
'respectable' physicians to the depiction and use of medical issues.
Translations of substantial sections of their writings, supplemented
with examination of visual sources, are offered to provide a vivid sense
of just how medicine and theatre interacted on a popular level. By
taking such an interdisciplinary and comparative approach, the reader is
able to consider documents that, despite being closely related, are
often not analysed together in meaningful ways. In so doing these
theatrical writings are located in their rightful place within the
mainstream of medical and theatre history, broadening our knowledge of
the interface between healing and performance.
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