Literature DB >> 22069795

Body, gender, and disease: the female breast in late imperial Chinese medicine.

Yi-Li Wu.   

Abstract

This paper examines the diverse ways in which Chinese medical experts historically gendered breast disease as a female ailment. By comparing representations of the female breast from the "Imperially-Compiled Golden Mirror of Medical Learning (Yuzuan yizong jinjian, 1742)" to those from earlier and contemporary texts, this paper analyzes how breast disease was alternately categorized as an ailment of childbearing and as a disease rooted in pathological female emotion. Medical awareness of breast disease in men did somewhat challenge these connections between womanhood and disease. Nevertheless, medical illustrations of women helped to reinforce the idea that breast disease was a characteristically female problem.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22069795     DOI: 10.1353/late.2011.0003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Late Imp China        ISSN: 0884-3236


  2 in total

1.  The Menstruating Womb: A Cross-Cultural Analysis of Body and Gender in Hŏ Chun's Precious Mirror of Eastern Medicine (1613).

Authors:  Yi-Li Wu
Journal:  Asian Med (Leiden)       Date:  2016

2.  Between the Living and the Dead: Trauma Medicine and Forensic Medicine in the Mid-Qing.

Authors:  Yi-Li Wu
Journal:  Front Hist China       Date:  2015-03
  2 in total

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